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Chitchat Sinkie MLM Godfather Immediately Sent To Jiuhu To Face Charges After 'Release' From Prison!

JohnTan

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
james-phang-wah.jpg


SINGAPORE: A day after his release from prison in Singapore, a multi-level marketing scheme founder has pled not guilty to charges in Malaysia on Thursday (Dec 21) that could send him back behind bars if convicted.

Singaporean James Phang Wah faces two charges under the Banking and Financial Institutions Act 1989 for accepting deposits without a valid license between 2006 and 2008 during his time assisting the management of its Malaysian affiliate, Sunshine Empire Sdn Bhd Malaysia.

Each charge carries a maximum fine of RM10 million (US$2.46 million) or a prison term of 10 years, or both.

"He felt shocked. He did not know, he was not ready in fact to be charged in Malaysia. He thought initially that the case was over in Singapore and the Malaysian government or authorities would not charge him for whatever offences he was seen to have done in Malaysia. But unfortunately turn of events, he's charged now in Malaysia," Phang's lawyer Shah Rizal Abdul Manan said.

Bail has been set at RM1 million (US$245,700) for each charge along with strict conditions including handing over his travel documents and reporting to the nearest police station once a month.

In June 2010, Sunshine Empire Sdn Bhd pled guilty to two charges of the same offence, and was fined RM1 million for each.

According to his lawyer, Phang had just been released from prison in Singapore on Wednesday after serving out a sentence that began in December, 2011.

The defence used this to argue for lower bail to be set, saying that their client , who was married with three children, had not been able to work and needed money for follow up treatment for health complications he suffered during his time in jail.

On Jul 30, 2010, Phang was sentenced to nine years' jail and fined S$60,000 for running a fraudulent trading company and falsifying accounts.

In what is believed to be one of the biggest Ponzi-like schemes in Singapore, Phang's company sold "lifestyle packages" which promised its investors high returns.

However, the returns came from new investors, rather than genuine profits.

Sunshine Empire had been placed on the Monetary Authority of Singapore's investor alert list in September, 2007, and was subsequently raided by the Commercial Affairs Department two months later.

Phang's wife Neo Kuon Huay was also fined S$60,000 for her involvement the case, while former company director Jackie Hoo Choo Cheat was sentenced to seven years' jail.

Read more at https://www.channelnewsasia.com/new...wah-charged-in-malaysia-for-accepting-9515508
 

ToaPehGong

Alfrescian
Loyal
Greed. A never ending problem for men but not all cheats are caught. Learn from the expert. Take small sums and use charity as a front e.g help poor people. There will still be suckers believing it.
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Scrooball (clone)

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://www.straitstimes.com/singapo...e-empire-duped-investors-james-phang-wah-2006

The Sunshine Empire (2006)
Guilty As Charged: Sunshine Empire duped investors of millions with Singapore’s biggest Ponzi scheme
James Phang Wah, the founder and head of Sunshine Empire, was sentenced to nine years’ jail and a $60,000 fine for criminal breach of trust.PHOTO: ST FILE
PUBLISHED
MAY 17, 2016, 5:20 AM SGT
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Self-styled entrepreneur James Phang Wah promised huge returns through his firm’s “revolutionary” investment plan, but it was nothing more than a Ponzi scheme
Amir Hussain
This story was first published in July 2015 in an e-book titled Guilty As Charged: 25 Crimes That Have Shaken Singapore Since 1965. A collaboration between The Straits Times and the Singapore Police Force, the e-book appeared in The Straits Times Star E-books app. Read the other crime stories here. (Warning: Some content in these stories may be disturbing for some individuals.)

THE SUNSHINE EMPIRE (2006)
Self-styled entrepreneur James Phang Wah promised huge returns through his firm’s “revolutionary” investment plan, but it was nothing more than a Ponzi scheme

Stepping into the plush Toa Payoh Central office of multi-level marketing firm Sunshine Empire, few investors would have thought that they would be duped by its charismatic founder, who saw himself as Asia’s answer to Warren Buffett, lived in a luxurious three-storey landed property in Jurong West and drove a shiny black Mercedes.

For 15 months between August 2006 and November 2007, thousands of unwitting Singaporeans bought almost 26,000 “lifestyle packages” ranging from $240 to $12,000 from the company, which had an office featuring gold trimmings and lush carpeting.



sunshine_empire_office.jpg

The lush office space of multi-level marketing firm Sunshine Empire. HANDOUT PHOTO


In November 2007, the police’s Commercial Affairs Department raided the fraudulent firm, owned by entrepreneur James Phang Wah, in what was to be the unravelling of Singapore’s biggest Ponzi scheme.


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Most investors would get back little or nothing, with the authorities recovering only $21 million out of more than the nearly $190 million swindled from ordinary Singaporeans, including retirees and students, lured by the promise of high returns.

  • What is a Ponzi scheme
  • It is a scam in which investors are promised high rates of return, but with little risk. The returns come from the funds put in by new investors. Earlier investors may see some returns, but the scheme collapses when the supply of new investors runs thin.

    Read more about Ponzi schemes here.
Only a few who invested in the early months of the scheme made any money.

In July 2010, the court which sentenced Phang to nine years’ jail and a $60,000 fine for criminal breach of trust described his scheme as a “premeditated, sustained, sophisticated fraud on a large scale” which no “unsuspecting mind could have easily seen through”.

Phang, the mastermind, came from humble beginnings.

He grew up on a Lim Chu Kang vegetable farm, and left school after his O levels.

To pay for his A-level classes which he attended at night, he worked in a shipyard and as a construction worker.

At 19, he went door-to-door selling stainless steel cooking utensils, health items and other products.

After graduating from the National University of Singapore with a degree in arts in 1983, he joined Shin Min Daily News as a feature writer from 1984 to 1990.
sunshine_empire_james_phang_house.jpg


Phang and his family lived in a luxurious three-storey landed property in Jurong West. PHOTO: SHIN MIN FILE
In 1990, he started multi-level marketing firm Number One Product, which sold magnetic mattresses.

He set up the Empire Group Alliance — an intricate network of different businesses from property to telecommunications, of which Sunshine is a part — in 2003.

He was its founder, director and international president, and boasted that its assets exceeded $300 million. He claimed that it took him five years to come up with a “revolutionary” business model for Sunshine.

First, people pay to become a Sunshine merchant, allowing them to buy thousands of items, from health supplements to lingerie, from its online platform.

They were then supposed to sell on these items. But that was not the lure. The bait were the so-called Consumer Rebate Privileges, which translated into monthly cash payouts.

Someone who bought a Gold package for $12,000 for instance could end up with total payouts of $19,200 after 15 months — an impressive return of 160 per cent.

Since the company was not earning real profit, the payouts for older investors came from the fees paid by new investors — the very definition of a Ponzi scheme.

Still that did not stop people from being fooled, pouring in tens of thousands to buy multiple packages, and then convincing friends and family members to join. Youth were a particular target for Sunshine.

After training sessions, Empire “managers” will take trainees out for supper. They would be dressed in black suits, carry expensive Montblanc pens and wallets, with some driving luxury cars such as BMWs.

This was the “lifestyle” the company was trying to sell.

But the only real winners were Phang and his accomplices.

sunshine_empire_james_phang_wah_neo_kuon_huay_jackie_hoo_choon_cheat.jpg

(From left) James Phang Wah, his wife Neo Kuon Huay and Jackie Hoo Choon Cheat, the company’s director. Neo was fined $60,000 for falsifying payment vouchers, while Hoo was given a seven-year jail term. PHOTO: ST FILE


Phang was paid over $7 million in “consultancy fees”, Sunshine’s director Jackie Hoo Choon Cheat and Phang’s wife Neo Kuon Huay, who claimed that she was Sunshine’s sales director, collected about $950,000 each.

Right till the end, the bespectacled Phang, who was called Lao Da or Big Brother by his supporters, kept up his air of confidence.

In a interview in 2008, after news broke that Sunshine was under investigation and as reports emerged that the projects boasted by his company never even existed, he compared himself to the United States investment guru, saying: “I’m a legend. I’m very good – better than Warren Buffett.”

He also told The Straits Times: “We acquire companies like you go to the market buying beancurd.”
 

chonburifc

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
this is a real talent. if limpeh pap, sure hire this talent to squeeze more juice from daft sinkees.
 

Bonut

Alfrescian
Loyal
Sounds very familiar leh,

First, boast you have many many million dollars.

Second, must announce you live in private property.

Third, must also announce you drive a flashy car.

After boasting all the above 3 lines, you start telling people you are a very good investor. Join me.
 

borom

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
For this type of scheme to work , the " correct" type of people must exist in the population in sufficient numbers-here I would say its about 70%
 
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