Lawyers said that the agreement, signed by the parties on Jun 3 and 4, also involves other confidential commitments to the US government, which will pursue settlement negotiations with other counterparties, including administrations in other international jurisdictions, to reach a global resolution to the debacle that led to the jailing of former premier Najib Razak.

Najib and Low were the architects of the scandal-ridden state-owned sovereign fund 1MDB.

“As we have discussed, this Settlement Letter Agreement takes into account your preference for the United States to handle negotiations with Malaysia, Singapore, Switzerland, France and other foreign countries which have restraining orders in place as to most of the assets described below and in the Actions, and sets forth the procedure for the liquidation and transfer of net liquidated proceeds to Malaysia, as well as our mutual interest in resolving any potential litigation over the assets referenced below in Table 1,” the document states. 

The list of the assets was redacted in the copy reviewed by CNA.

SETTLEMENT AGREEMENT LETTER DIFFERS FROM DOJ’S STATEMENT

The latest settlement agreement is the second asset forfeiture deal between the DOJ and Low following a separate US$700 million deal in October 2019.

Shockwaves from the 1MDB affair continue to percolate in Malaysia, and Low remains one of its most wanted criminal suspects. 

For starters, the detailed provisions set out in the Settlement Agreement Letter are markedly different from the statement issued by DOJ on Wednesday, in which it stated that it had resolved two civil forfeiture cases against assets that were acquired with funds allegedly embezzled from 1MDB.

These cases stem from what US prosecutors have maintained was part of a conspiracy that took numerous shapes between 2009 and 2015 and involved the misappropriation of more than US$4.5 billion in stolen funds from 1MDB. 

The DOJ noted that Low bought the Warhol and Monet artworks for around US$35 million, and pegged the valuation of the surrendered financial deposits and real estate properties at around US$67 million. 

The DOJ also noted that Low separately faces charges in the Eastern District of New York for allegedly conspiring to launder billions of dollars embezzled from 1MDB and for conspiring to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act by allegedly paying bribes to various Malaysian and Emirati officials.

In the District of Columbia, he faces charges for allegedly conspiring to make and conceal foreign and conduit campaign contributions during the US presidential election in 2012. 

The DOJ added that the latest settlement “agreement does not release any entity or individual from filed or potential criminal charges”.

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