Ex-Goldman banker - and key witness in Malaysia sovereign wealth fund trial - admits pocketing £45m in kickbacks







Ex-Goldman banker - and key witness in Malaysia sovereign wealth fund trial - admits pocketing £45m in kickbacks
A former Goldman Sachs partner has admitted he took £45million in kickbacks, lied to the bank about his corrupt deals, and twice forged divorce documents so he could marry again.
Despite his history of deceit, Tim Leissner is the key witness in the trial of former Goldman colleague Roger Ng who is charged with helping loot Malaysia’s 1MDB sovereign wealth fund between 2009 and 2014.
Leissner pleaded guilty to conspiring to launder money and violate an anti-bribery law in 2018 and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.
Provided by This Is Money High life: Tim Leissner (pictured) is the key witness in the trial of former Goldman colleague Roger Ng who is charged with helping loot Malaysia’s 1MDB sovereign wealth fund
Ng, 49, pleaded not guilty to similar charges and is standing trial in Brooklyn federal court in New York.
In more than a week of testimony, Leissner described his high-flying lifestyle as the lucrative 1MDB deals made him a ‘star’ and the steps he took to avoid getting caught.
Leissner said he spent the kickbacks on an £11million 170 ft yacht, apartments in London and New York, and an investment in Italian football team and current Serie A champions Inter Milan.
In 2013 he met Kimora Lee Simmons, an American model and judge on America’s Next Top Model, and ex-wife of music producer Russell Simmons.
They set a wedding date before Leissner finalised a divorce from another woman, so he forged divorce documents – the second time he had pulled such a stunt, he said.
Leissner, 52, said he hoped coming clean would ‘clear this chapter of my life’.
‘It’s not the proudest time of my life, but at the time I wanted to make more money, even though I was well-paid,’ Leissner testified.
The charges stem from some £5billion in bonds Goldman helped 1MDB sell in 2012 and 2013.
Prosecutors say nearly £3.5billion of that was embezzled by officials, bankers and their associates, in one of the biggest scandals in Wall Street history.
In 2020, Goldman Sachs agreed to pay a £2.3billion fine.
Leissner said he and Ng, Goldman’s top banker for Malaysia, secretly liaised with conspirators outside Goldman, and received kickbacks.
Ng’s lawyer, Marc Agnifilo, argues that Leissner is falsely implicating Ng to lower his own sentence. Prosecutors say Leissner’s assertions are backed by other evidence.
Reference: This Is Money: Daily Mail City & Finance Reporter
Articles-Popular
- Main
- Contact Us
- Planetary Existences-2
- Planetary Existences
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 9
- TWO REVELATIONS-2
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 8
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 10
- The Two Revelations
- The Fourth Way - Study of Oneself - P.D.Ouspensky
- Impeachment Investigators Subpoena White House - Ukraine
- Universality of Initiation
- Initiation and the Devas
- The Path Of Initiation
- The Fourth Way - Wrong Functions - P.D Ouspensky
- The Participants In The Mysteries-2
- Statues are a mark of honour. Like Edward Colston, Cecil Rhodes and Oliver Cromwell have to go
- The Final Initiation
- Discipleship - Group Relations - 2
- The Probationary Path - 2
- The Participants In The Mysteries
- Discipleship - Group Relationships
- Discipleship
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 7
- The Succeeding Two Initiations
- Jeffery Epstein - The Saga - 6
Articles - Latest
- Iran’s underground military network has helped sustain its capacity under attack
- Why are Ships Painted Red Below the Waterline
- Dubai is Collapsing
- Divergent Technologies, Mach Industries unveil Venom autonomous
- The Strait of Hormuz
- Uranium-mThe most powerful element in the World
- China's New Generation transport
- Iran V Israel
- US War On Iran
- They Lied to Us! The Truth They Hid About Hitler’s Death — Gerard Williams
- Ramaposa Dragged Out of Parliament
- Madagascar Goverment Collapse
- The Reality of Digital Id
- Welcome To The End Of Western Dominance
- Why is the Sahel turning its back on France?
- Sarkozy gets 5 years in prison in Gadhafi case
- The EU in 2025: A union at the crossroads of chaos
- Deep distrust of EU leaves Italy's Meloni in a corner over bailout fund
- Regime crisis in France: Bayrou falls, now Macron must go!
- Idi Amin president of Uganda
- Anger at Starmer's 'surrender deal' that hands Spain control over Gibraltar border
- Iran doubles down as US signals Israel could strike during nuclear talks



