The Star Malaysia

Courtroom drama begins

Sources: Offences include committing CBT and money laundering

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Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak faces multiple charges including criminal breach of trust and money laundering. Attorney General Tommy Thomas will lead the prosecutio­n team. The former prime minister was arrested by MACC in relation to 1MDB subsidiary SRC Internatio­nal Sdn Bhd’s case. Najib says he will clear his name in court.

PUTRAJAYA: Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak is expected to face several charges for committing offences under two Acts, sources said.

Highly placed sources at the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission (MACC) said Attorney General Tommy Thomas is expected to lead the prosecutio­n team and Najib will be brought to court about 8.30am.

“We believe Najib will be charged under the Anti Money-Laundering Act and the Penal Code,” a source told The Star yesterday.

Other sources said Najib is expected to face four counts of committing criminal breach of trust and anti-money laundering charges involving a total of RM42mil and believed to be linked to the SRC Internatio­nal Sdn Bhd case.

The offences are those spelled out under Section 409 of the Penal Code and under the Anti Money-Laundering, Anti-Terrorism Financing and Proceeds of Unlawful Activities Act 2001 (Amla).

On hand to assist Thomas in court today will be senior prosecutor­s from the AG’s Chambers Datuk Mohd Hanafiah Zakaria and Datuk Ishak Mohd Yusoff.

Hanafiah is the head of the Member of the Expert Council (Prosecutio­n) unit in the Chambers.

Najib’s family members confirmed that the former prime minister would be represente­d by senior lawyer Tan Sri Muhammad Shafee Abdullah.

Earlier yesterday, Najib was arrested at his house in Jalan Langgak Duta in Kuala Lumpur at about 3pm and was whisked to the MACC headquarte­rs in Putrajaya about an hour later.

Sources also revealed that the former prime minister looked crestfalle­n and tense when he was brought to the questionin­g room.

He was clad in a light-coloured shirt and blue suit.

Sources added that Najib was quiet most of the time.

“Investigat­ors brought him inside for questionin­g as soon as he arrived at MACC,” a source said.

Lawyer Shafee was seen entering the MACC office at 8.30pm.

Earlier in the morning, pressmen were waiting outside the MACC headquarte­rs for former deputy prime minister Datuk Seri Dr Ahmad Zahid Hamidi, who was being questioned by investigat­ors.

As word spread of Najib’s arrest, the reporters rushed to the main entrance of the MACC building in the hope of catching Najib as he was brought in.

However, by then it was unclear whether Najib had already entered the building through a different entrance.

A spokesman from the MACC later confirmed that Najib was in the building.

Members of the media returned to the MACC lobby, where they had been stationed earlier, in time to catch Dr Ahmad Zahid.

The MACC had launched investigat­ions on Najib following the 1MDB controvers­y.

The Commission is looking into allegation­s that some RM42mil had gone into Najib’s account from SRC Internatio­nal, a former subsidiary of 1MDB.

According to Bernama, a court source said Najib would be charged at the Criminal Sessions Court 2 located at Level 4 on the right wing of the Kuala Lumpur Courts Complex.

The case, according to the news agency, would be mentioned before the most senior Sessions Court judge Datuk Zainal Abidin Kamarudin, and then transferre­d to the Criminal High Court 1 before Justice Azman Abdullah.

SRC Internatio­nal was a subsidiary of 1MDB, and was placed under the jurisdicti­on of the Finance Ministry in 2012.

MACC chief commission­er Datuk Seri Mohd Shukri Abdull said on May 22 that the MACC probe in 2015 against Najib involved funds of RM2.6bil and RM42mil that were believed to have been transferre­d from SRC Internatio­nal to the former prime minister's personal bank accounts.

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