---
Tag: ["đ€”đ»", "đž", "đșđž", "đđč", "đ€"]
Date: 2023-03-05
DocType: "WebClipping"
Hierarchy:
TimeStamp: 2023-03-05
Link: https://www.bloomberg.com/features/2023-us-china-tensions-scandal-fugees-1mdb/
location:
CollapseMetaTable: true
---
Parent:: [[@News|News]]
Read:: [[2023-03-06]]
---
```button
name Save
type command
action Save current file
id Save
```
^button-US-China1MDBScandalNSave
# US-China 1MDB Scandal Pits FBI Against Former Fugee Pras Michel
![Pras Michél](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/imcancAHEnr0/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Photographer: Marc Baptiste for Bloomberg Businessweek
## The Fugee, the Fugitive and the FBI
How rapper Pras MichĂ©l got entangled in one of the centuryâs great financial scandals, mediated a high-stakes negotiation between global superpowers and was accused of major crimes.
March 2, 2023, 12:01 AM UTC
## 1
---
The phone call awoke Pras MichĂ©l in the middle of a spring night in 2017. His âcousin from Chinaâ needed to meet, the woman on the line said. The caller was an ex-girlfriend who MichĂ©l, a rapper, producer and member of legendary hip-hop group the Fugees, hadnât spoken to in years. He grew up in a Haitian family in New Jersey and doesnât have a cousin from China, but he knew what the message meant.
Michél dressed and called a car to take him to the Four Seasons Hotel on 57th Street in Manhattan. The front desk clerk handed him a note. It instructed him to exit the hotel and circle the block twice, scanning to see if he was being tailed. Michél did as he was told and returned to the clerk, who gave him a room key. He went up to an empty suite and waited.
After about 25 minutes there was a knock on the door. An austere-looking Chinese security agent in a suit gave MichĂ©l a second room key and told him to go to the penthouse. Inside, another agent took MichĂ©lâs phones and placed them in a pouch. A table and two chairs sat in the middle of the room.
âThey canât kill me in the Four Seasons,â MichĂ©l said to himself.
Soon a short, chubby man with wavy hair arrived, surrounded by more security personnel. MichĂ©l had met him before. He was Sun Lijun, Chinaâs vice minister of public security. Sun began shouting in Chinese. An interpreter translated for MichĂ©l: âWho the f--- do the US government think they are?â
Sun said heâd come to the US for sensitive negotiations with President Donald Trumpâs administration but had failed to secure a high-level meeting. For three years, Beijing had been targeting Chinese nationals living in America who it viewed as threats. Agents had surveilled emigrĂ©s, visited their houses and detained family members still in China, aiming to persuade the targets to return home, where some would be charged with serious crimes. Called âOperation Fox Hunt,â the covert repatriation strategy had infuriated US officials.
Of particular concern to Sun was Guo Wengui, a real estate billionaire living on a temporary visa in New York. From his home overlooking Central Park, Guo had [enraged the Chinese government](https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/30/world/asia/china-guo-wengui.html "The Billionaire Gadfly in Exile Who Stared Down Beijing - The New York Times") by making a series of scandalous claims to the media, purporting to reveal the assets of top Communist Party officials. China was prepared to release two American citizensâone of them pregnantâbeing kept in the country under a so-called exit ban if the US deported Guo.
Behind the scenes, the US government had been agitating for their return. But when Sun and his entourage arrived in Washington, hoping to make a deal, Attorney General Jeff Sessions was traveling and unable to meet with them, according to an email Sessions wrote in May 2017. Unsure what to do next, Sun sought MichĂ©lâs help. (The Department of Justice declined to comment.)
âThis is way above my pay grade,â MichĂ©l said after Sun laid out the situation. âBut if I were you, I would at least send the pregnant woman back as a token of good faith.â
âYou think so?â Sun asked, now calmer and speaking in English. An agent handed Sun a telephone. After a brief conversation, he turned again to MichĂ©l. âWhen do you want her back?â
MichĂ©l, whoâd won two Grammys with the Fugees before going on to a solo career, was unsure about the usual time frame for international hostage repatriations. âTomorrow?â he asked.
âThe weekend is no good.â
âMonday? Tuesday?â
By Tuesday the woman was back in the US.
![The FugeesâWyclef Jean, Lauryn Hill and Pras MichĂ©lâin New York in 1994.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iZ3rg8bd70s4/v0/640x-1.jpg)
The FugeesâWyclef Jean, Lauryn Hill and Pras MichĂ©lâin New York in 1994. Photographer: David Corio
About two months later an FBI special agent interrupted Michél at brunch near his apartment in SoHo. The agent had 12 photos of Chinese officials and many questions: Who did Michél meet at the Four Seasons? Who else had contacted him from the Chinese government? And of course: How had a famous rapper and record producer found himself in the middle of a high-stakes negotiation between global superpowers?
MichĂ©lâs audience with a top Chinese security official, reported here for the first time, was a flashpoint in one of the most unusual political influence campaigns in recent memory. His involvement began by chance, around 2006, when he met a baby-faced Malaysian businessman named Jho Low. Low was a globe-trotting financier whose lavish spending would put him on familiar terms with dozens of A-list entertainers. But by 2016, US investigators believed heâd masterminded the embezzlement of billions of dollars from the Malaysian sovereign wealth fund 1MDB, blowing much of it on [artwork, real estate and gifts for celebrity friends](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2023-03-02/leonardo-dicaprio-kim-kardashian-grilled-for-1mdb-secrets-fbi-documents-show "Leonardo DiCaprio, Kim Kardashian Grilled for 1MDB Secrets, FBI Documents Show") including Leonardo DiCaprio and Kim Kardashian. Few were as close to Low as MichĂ©l: Prosecutors seized $95 million that they alleged originated with Low from MichĂ©lâs accounts.
[![Image of Leonardo DiCaprio and Jho Low](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iJirvbVSGLs4/v0/640x-1.jpg)](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/features/2023-03-02/leonardo-dicaprio-kim-kardashian-grilled-for-1mdb-secrets-fbi-documents-show)
With US authorities closing in and moving to confiscate his assets, Low needed help. He turned first to MichĂ©l, hoping to cash in on the starâs connections to President Barack Obama, for whom MichĂ©l had raised money during the 2012 campaign. Next, Low turned to China, one of the few countries that could protect him from the long reach of American law enforcement. (Low didnât reply to requests for comment. Chinaâs Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement that it was âunawareâ of the events described in this story. Sun, who received a suspended death sentence for corruption offenses last year, couldnât be reached.)
To investigate this wild tale of celebrity and political intrigue, *Bloomberg Businessweek* drew on legal filings, interviews with people close to the case and a cache of previously undisclosed FBI and Justice Department documents. The records show how MichĂ©l, at Lowâs request, helped assemble a team of Republican influencersâincluding fundraiser Elliott Broidy, businesswoman Nickie Lum Davis and casino magnate Steve Wynnâcapable of reaching the highest levels of the Trump administration as it took hold of the US government. Soon, all would be targeted by agents from the FBIâs international corruption division as well as federal prosecutors from Honolulu to New York.
The US didnât catch Low, but it did squeeze his associates. Many agreed to cooperate and pursue plea deals with prosecutors. MichĂ©l declined, and the consequences for him could be dire. Federal prosecutors [charged him in 2021](https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/united-states-seeks-recover-more-1-billion-obtained-corruption-involving-malaysian-sovereign "United States Seeks to Recover More Than $1 Billion Obtained from Corruption Involving Malaysian Sovereign Wealth Fund | OPA | Department of Justice") with 10 offenses stemming from his dealings with Low, ranging from conspiracy to witness tampering and acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government.
[![Image excerpt of legal document.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i56h.AgF_KFs/v0/640x-1.jpg)](https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/rZEhKQ11g4wo/v0)
MichĂ©l maintains his innocence and has decided to fight the charges. âThe common thread that runs through this is that Pras was trying to get the benefits for the United States that were being offered by Minister Sun,â says his attorney, David Kenner. âPrasâs motivation was to try to assist the United States.â Kenner adds that MichĂ©lâs relationship with Low was rooted in a desire to secure investment for entertainment projects.
The trial is scheduled to begin in Washington in late March. If convicted, Michél could go to federal prison for decades.
## 2
---
All MichĂ©l knew about Low, the Malaysian guy heâd been asked to meet in 2006, was that he was loaded and liked to hang out with celebrities. The venue was a nightclub in Manhattanâs Meatpacking District. A couple of other patrons that night, Wall Street types, paid the club for a chance to get on the microphone. They announced that they were the richest people in the room and planned to buy everyone a drink. Not to be outdone, Low paid even more to use the mic and said heâd be buying every bottle the nightclub had on handâand that staff should go to the club across the street so he could buy their bottles, too.
Later, around 2011, MichĂ©l and Low became close friends. He was just one of many celebrities Low cozied up to during a whirlwind of yacht vacations, club nights and gambling, lubricated by his vast financial resources. Kardashian would later tell the FBI sheâd bought a Ferrari using $305,000 Low gave her in cash. The supermodel Miranda Kerr, whom Low briefly dated, received about $8 million in jewelry. Low was especially generous with DiCaprio, donating a $3.2 million Picasso and a $9.2 million Basquiat to his charity. He also financed *The Wolf of Wall Street*, a film DiCaprio had been trying to develop for years. (DiCaprio and Kerr later turned over items theyâd received from Low to the US government.)
![Jho Low on a boat](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iPAlauSsv2eQ/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Low on a boat.
In MichĂ©l, Low had found a friend who was no less than music royalty. Born Prakazrel MichĂ©l, heâd been raised in a strict home in New Jersey, [telling an interviewer in 2007](https://gulfnews.com/lifestyle/pras-is-back-1.196482 "Gulf News: Pras Is Back") that his parents forbade him from watching TV or even wearing sneakers. He met his future collaborator Lauryn Hill in high school, later forming the group that became the Fugees with one of his friends, Wyclef Jean. Their second album, *The Score*, was one of the most influential records of the 1990s, a double Grammy winner that sold more than 18 million copies.
The Fugees disbanded not long after releasing The Score, and apart from one hit, *Ghetto Supastar (That Is What You Are)*, MichĂ©lâs solo career never took off. But he continued to earn money from the bandâs songs and maintained a lavish lifestyle, including a $30,000-a-month New York apartment. His tastes tended toward the flashy: Patek Philippe watches and a Lamborghini SUV, which he [showed off on social media](https://www.instagram.com/prasmichel/?hl=en "Pras MichĂ©l (@prasmichel) âą Instagram photos and videos"). According to email records, MichĂ©lâs financial adviser periodically admonished him for spending beyond his means, complaining at one point that heâd gone $250,000 over budget in a two-month period alone. His lawyer, Kenner, says MichĂ©lâs financial situation wasnât strained, however. âSome have advanced the notion that Pras was hurting for money and that might \[show\] a motive to become involved in those matters that led to this indictment,â he says. âNothing could be further from the truth.â
MichĂ©l was different from the other celebrities in Lowâs coterie. He saw himself as something more than a rapper and producer, and heâd become what Kenner calls a connectorâa man with a thick Rolodex of friends in politics, entertainment and finance. Beyond music, MichĂ©l took on a range of projects, often focused on social-justice or political issues: spending nine days on Skid Row in Los Angeles for a documentary; traveling to the Somali coast in search of high-seas pirates for another film; serving as an adviser to Michel Martelly, the performer who became Haitiâs president in 2011.
Closer to home, MichĂ©l was a passionate supporter of President Obama. Government documents show that he wanted to become a more serious player, even mentioning a desire to be considered for an ambassadorship. (Kenner says MichĂ©l quickly dropped the idea âonce he was told that he would have to live in the country where he was an ambassador.â) MichĂ©l bankrolled a political action committee called Black Men Vote PAC and, in the runup to the 2012 US election, told a Democratic official in an email that he was âthinking about doing a fundraiserââŠâlooking to raise anywhere from 5-10 million.â A mutual friend forwarded the email to Low and told himâerroneouslyâthat âbeing a foreigner is not a problem.â (In fact, foreign nationals are prohibited from donating to US campaigns, including via PACs.)
Low wanted in. Federal prosecutors say he sidestepped the law by sending more than $21 million to MichĂ©l, who then used his own accounts and various âstraw donorsâ to contribute about $2 million to Obamaâs reelection effort. Itâs not clear what happened to the rest. (Kenner says MichĂ©l depended on a lawyer and advisers to manage his financial activities.)
![Low at a White House holiday party in 2012.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i8u2DTG4562c/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Low at a White House holiday party in 2012.
Low was preoccupied with projecting an image of success, and after Obama won, he received some of what he craved. Another Democratic donor, tech executive Frank White Jr., told the FBI that in late 2012 he brought Low to a holiday party at the White House, where Low posed for a photo with the president and first lady. (A representative for the Obamas declined to comment.) But if Low thought his donations would buy him political cover in Washington, he was mistaken. In 2015, as press reports about the graft at 1MDB multiplied, the FBI and the DOJ opened an investigation, led by Robert Heuchling, a special agent with the bureauâs international corruption unit in New York. According to a later FBI memo, the lines of inquiry included investigating the theft of embezzled funds and their laundering into the US, as well as potential violations of banking rules and anti-bribery laws by Lowâs network of enablers. Agents soon identified MichĂ©l as a Low allyâand a potential cooperating witness.
About a year after the investigation was opened, federal prosecutors in California filed a sprawling forfeiture action, seeking to seize more than $1 billion in assets that Low and his associates had accumulated. The filings spoke to the lifestyle of astonishing glitz theyâd built since 1MDBâs establishment in 2009: in New York, a penthouse in the Time Warner Center and luxury condos in Chelsea and SoHo; in Los Angeles, a boutique hotel and multiple mansions; a Bombardier Global 5000 jet; a material stake in EMI Music Publishing, the rights holder for songs by Drake, Queen and other artists. The rights to *The Wolf of Wall Street* were also the subject of a seizure complaint.
#### Dramatis Personae
In the summer of 2016, MichĂ©l was in St-Tropez, on Franceâs sun-soaked CĂŽte dâAzur, when he ran into Lowâs brother, Szen. Szen asked MichĂ©l to speak to Low, who explained his issues with the DOJ and dismissed the US allegations as âall lies.â Low complained that his legal team was moving too slowly to resolve the cases, which were making it difficult for him to operate. He wondered if MichĂ©l had ideas about who could help.
## 3
---
After the Democratsâ defeat in the 2016 election, halting a case as large as the one against Low required pull with the freshly installed Trump administration. MichĂ©l didnât have any, but he knew someone who might.
In early 2017 he spoke with an old friend, Nickie Lum Davis. A TV producer who split her time between Los Angeles and Hawaii, Lum Davis had an unusual political pedigree. Her parents, Eugene and Nora Lum, had been major fundraisers for Bill Clinton and had eventually pleaded guilty to arranging illegal donations. Lum Davisâs own connections were weighted toward Republicans. Sheâd [converted to Judaism](https://jewishjournal.com/cover_story/70359/meet-mr-and-mrs-jdate/ "Meet Mr. and Mrs. JDate") after meeting her now ex-husband, Jdate co-founder Joe Shapira, and become hawkishly pro-Israel. On the coffee table at their home in Beverly Hills, the couple kept busts of Rudy Giuliani and George W. Bush.
Lum Davis suggested a name: Elliott Broidy, one of Southern Californiaâs most prolific Republican fundraisers. MichĂ©l asked her to send supporting materials he could relay to Low, including photos of Broidy with Trump, as well as a brief bio and notes about his connections to the president. âHas long standing relationship with Sec of Justice Dept â Jeff Sessions that goes back 15 years,â the material read. Broidy was also âOne of two people who are close to the boss that were instrumental in boss getting there â that did not take a job in the administration.â (A representative for Broidy declined to comment; Lum Davis didnât respond to a detailed request for comment.)
Early one morning in mid-March, MichĂ©l, Lum Davis and Broidy met at Broidyâs Los Angeles office to hammer out a potential deal to work for Low. According to a later FBI interview summary, MichĂ©l told the others that Low was ânot a bad guy,â but rather a smart businessman who simply wanted to deal with his legal issues. Securing Broidyâs help would be expensive. A draft agreement the group prepared called for Low to pay a retainer of $8 million. If the team succeeded in resolving the DOJâs forfeiture actions within six months, heâd pay a $75 million success fee; if it took six months to a year, the amount would drop to $50 million. (Kenner says MichĂ©l mistakenly thought Broidy was a lawyer and wanted him to represent Lowâânot to influence government policy,â as the US government later asserted.)
To ensure he received what he felt was fair, MichĂ©l insisted that the money, and all communications with Low and his associates, go through him. He, in turn, would deal with Lum Davis, who would pass on information to Broidy. He was âconcerned about being cut out,â Lum Davis would later say. About a week after the meeting, a financial adviser set up two Delaware companies on MichĂ©lâs behalf, Anicorn LLC and Artemus Group LLC. By the end of the month, both companies had accounts at Los Angeles-based City National Bank.
The next step was to meet with Low, who was for obvious reasons avoiding the US. He proposed they gather in Thailand. Broidy told Lum Davis heâd need $1 million to get on the plane, from âuntaintedâ funds. Reluctantly, MichĂ©l fronted it himself. The group landed in Bangkok at the beginning of May. A few hours after they arrived at their hotel, Low showed up at Lum Davisâs suite.
[![Excerpt from the July 2017 FBI interview summary for Michél..](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iPt0u72kCDfk/v0/640x-1.jpg)](https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/rCXDLT9qvaf0/v0)
According to court filings and grand jury testimony, Broidy told the group he believed he could use his ties to Sessions, Trumpâs attorney general, to persuade the US government to drop its pursuit of 1MDB-related assets. But before any of that, there was the matter of money. âYouâve had so many of your assets forfeited, so how are you going to pay?â Broidy asked.
Low told his visitors not to worry. âI have a friend whoâs helping me to pay for my bills,â he said. The financier didnât identify the generous friend.
Before the meeting ended, Michél raised another matter, one that revealed another interested party: the Chinese government. He told Broidy and Lum Davis that Low was interested in Guo, the businessman living in New York, who was making increasingly bold claims about corruption among high-ranking Chinese leaders.
![Exiled Chinese businessman Guo Wengui poses for a portrait at the Sherry Luxembourg hotel in Manhattan where he lives.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iZ6MITVws80k/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Guo in Manhattan in 2017. Photographer: Natalie Keyssar
China had issued a notice seeking his arrest through Interpol weeks earlier, claiming Guo was wanted for bribery. It wasnât clear why Low would care about Guoâs status, but he had reasons to seek favor from Beijing. According to the *Wall Street Journal*, China in 2016 had [offered to bail out](https://www.wsj.com/articles/how-china-flexes-its-political-muscle-to-expand-power-overseas-11546890449 "WSJ Investigation: China Offered to Bail Out Troubled Malaysian Fund in Return for Deals - WSJ") 1MDB, which owed billions more than it could repay. And with US criminal charges a possibility, being useful to the Chinese government might provide Low a measure of protection.
As the Bangkok meeting drew to a close, Low said that he was willing to move forward with the Americans and that information on payment would follow. He was leaving town, and Lum Davis, Broidy and Michél returned to their rooms to book flights home. They had work to do in Washington.
## 4
---
Within days of the Bangkok meeting, Low started to demonstrate that he could pay. On May 8, 2017, $2.8 million landed in an account belonging to Anicorn, one of the companies Michél had incorporated. An additional $3 million arrived less than 10 days later. The wires originated with a Hong Kong corporation called Lucky Mark (HK) Trading Ltd. Although it had no obvious connection to Low, US prosecutors allege that he used the company to move money.
As the payments came in, Low told MichĂ©l he wanted the group to meet again, in Hong Kong. They agreed. âWhen someone sends you a large sum of money and then wants to see you, you have to go to them,â Lum Davis would later tell the FBI. As MichĂ©l, Lum Davis and Broidy arrived, the rapper received some news by phone. Their appointment had been moved. The new venue, he told Lum Davis, was âjust outside Hong Kong,â on the Chinese mainland.
Lum Davis was alarmed. âWe donât have visas to go into China,â she said. âHow are we going to be able to go?â
âI think theyâll take care of it. Donât worry, weâll be able to get over the border,â MichĂ©l replied.
At the boundary, the group handed over their US passports and were waved through to Shenzhen. Soon Lum Davis, Broidy and MichĂ©l were sitting in another hotel suite with Low. There was someone he wanted his visitors to see. They walked to a different room, where Sunâthe Chinese security official whom MichĂ©l would later meet in New Yorkâwas waiting with his entourage, all of them smoking. After some pleasantries, Sun began talking through an interpreter about Guo and what China was willing to do if the US facilitated his return.
![From left: Sean Penn, Bill Clinton and Pras Michél](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/iKiBAkWV3qrs/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Michél with Sean Penn and Bill Clinton.
![A fundraising event Pras put together and held in September 2012 at the Washington, DC home of Frank White Jr, an Obama campaign official. Jho Low's father is sitting next to Obama on our right, seated next to Pras is Mohamed Al Husseiny, the CEO of a large sovereign wealth fund in the Middle East.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/ipbm68LARSR0/v0/640x-1.jpg)
MichĂ©l and Lowâs father flanking Obama at a fundraiser in 2012.
![Pras Michél with President Joe Biden](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i7xxw1AecpY8/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Michél with Biden.
As a first step, Sun said, the government would release Americans it was holding and take back Chinese nationals convicted of crimes in the US whose deportations it had previously refused to accept. It would also consider new cooperation on cybersecurity issues. It sounded like an attractive trade. âMaybe youâre just not getting the message to the right person,â Broidy suggested, according to court filings. He said he could help arrange a meeting between Sun and Sessions, to âtry to get your message through, that you really want this fugitive returned to China and what you guys are willing to offer.â
The three Americans went to Broidyâs room with Low and ordered lunch. Before leaving, MichĂ©l pulled out a USB drive and uploaded a file onto Lum Davisâs computer, asking her to pass its contents to Broidy. It listed the purported legal allegations against Guoâincluding wire fraud, money laundering and even kidnapping. (Guo has denied wrongdoing; he didnât reply to requests for comment.)
Soon after, Broidy sent an email to Rick Gates, whoâd been a top figure on Trumpâs campaign. He attached a memo addressed to Sessions, as well as the Interpol arrest notice for Guo. Broidy didnât mention Low in the document, saying only that heâd been âasked by my Malaysian business contactsâ to meet with Sun. (Sessions later told prosecutors he didnât recall seeing it; he didnât reply to a request for comment.) After listing steps the Chinese official had offered to take to âimprove law enforcement relations,â Broidy got to the ask: âThe one request China will make is that Chinese national, Guo Wen Gui,â be deported or extradited, âso he can be charged with these violations and go through regular criminal proceedings.â
## 5
---
Less than a week after the Shenzhen discussion, Sun was in Washington trying to secure an agreement from Sessions that Guo would be removed. When Sessions couldnât meet with him, prompting MichĂ©lâs late-night summons to the Four Seasons in New York, Sun took the rapperâs advice and authorized the release of the pregnant woman China was blocking from leaving.
The womanâs mother was a target of Operation Fox Hunt, Beijingâs pressure campaign against expatriates. She was [described in a DOJ filing](https://www.justice.gov/opa/press-release/file/1488681/download "UNITED STATES OF AMERICA v. SUN HOI YING, a/k/a âSun Haiying,â Defendant.") as an American citizen who previously worked at a Chinese state-owned enterprise and was accused by the government of embezzlement. Her daughter had traveled to China to visit relatives in 2016; officials were keeping the daughter there under the exit ban until she persuaded her mother to return.
Within a few days of MichĂ©lâs intervention, the pregnant woman was on a flight to John F. Kennedy International Airport. Yet the Trump administration didnât budge on Guo. MichĂ©l wanted to gather information for Low on the reasons for the governmentâs resistance, official documents show, and in late June he made a bold gambit: He contacted the FBI directly and asked for a meeting. Agents soon came to see him at a restaurant in Manhattan.
MichĂ©l told the agents heâd been working with a friend named âJonââa thinly veiled reference to Lowâto help China get Guo back. According to an FBI summary of the conversation, he âprobed the interviewing agents,â trying to understand whether Guo had some relationship with the bureau that would explain the governmentâs reluctance to deport him. Although they assured MichĂ©l that the FBI didnât have any arrangement with Guo, he âdid not believe the interviewing agents and repeatedly asked if the FBI was meetingâ with the businessman. When the agents asked MichĂ©l why Chinese officials would be interested in his assistance, he said, âThey believe that I can provide intelligence.â He also noted that heâd be reporting back to âJonâ on the discussion and said heâd be interested in keeping in touch about Guo.
It often takes years of painstaking work for FBI agents to identify people collaborating with foreign governments. But now, MichĂ©l had come to them, happy even to identify some of his contacts abroad. He spoke to the FBI a second time in July, when Heuchling, the agent overseeing the sprawling probe into 1MDB corruption, turned up unannounced during MichĂ©lâs SoHo brunch. Looking at photos from the FBI, MichĂ©l identified Sun as the minister heâd met at the Four Seasons and pointed out Sunâs security guard. (Kenner says MichĂ©l thought he was âoperating in the best interest of the USâ by providing assistance to the FBI and hoped the US could benefit from increased cooperation from China.)
In Washington, Broidy and Lum Davis were continuing to work their Trump administration contacts, stressing that China was willing to release more Americans in return for Guo. With Guoâs visa soon to expire, Broidy also reached out to Steve Wynnâa major Republican donor whoâd founded Wynn Resorts Ltd., which operates large casinos in the Chinese territory of Macauâto ask for help. It âis critically \[sic\] that his new visa application he \[sic\] immediately denied,â Broidy texted. Wynn took the matter directly to Trump, bringing up the case at a White House dinner with the president and dropping off a copy of Guoâs passport with Trumpâs secretary. Wynn relayed an update to Broidy: âThis is with the highest levels of the state department and defense department. They are working on this.â
To Lum Davis, it appeared victory was imminent. âYou are the man right now,â she texted Broidy. âThey are going to give you the Presidentâs medal of freedom award after what you will accomplish for this \[sic\]the country.â
Broidy was determined to finish the job. âI am going to slam until itâs done,â he texted back.
## 6
---
On a Saturday in mid-July 2017, MichĂ©l called another old friend. A lawyer by training, George Higginbotham had helped MichĂ©l with dozens of legal matters over the years; heâd later describe his work for the rapper as ensuring nothing got âf---ed up.â Even after Higginbotham took a job at the Department of Justice, in an office responsible for liaising with members of Congress, internal government documents show he continued doing work for MichĂ©l, including some related to Low. Higginbotham helped move Lowâs payments into US banks and edited contracts to ensure there were no references to Low or to companies that could be traced to him.
This time, MichĂ©l had an especially unusual request. He wanted Higginbotham to go to Chinaâs Embassy the next day, a Sunday, and meet with the ambassador. Higginbotham asked why MichĂ©l couldnât go himself. âGeorge, youâre an attorney,â MichĂ©l responded. âYouâre more well-spoken than I am. Heâll have more respect for you.â
[![Excerpt from the January 2018 FBI interview summary for Michél.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i1ZdcBGa4n7s/v0/640x-1.jpg)](https://assets.bwbx.io/documents/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/rZEhKQ11g4wo/v0)
Higginbotham, a veteran bureaucrat, knew that meetings between the US and foreign powers were tightly choreographed. A DOJ staffer showing up at a Chinese compound in Washington could trigger alarms among Americaâs spy hunters. Higginbotham asked MichĂ©l if they could hold the discussion at a different venueâa restaurant, a coffee shop, anywhere but the sovereign diplomatic territory of Americaâs main strategic rival. MichĂ©l said noâit had to be at the embassy.
MichĂ©l came to Washington to help Higginbotham prepare. They met at the Four Seasons in Georgetown on Sunday morning. Legal documents indicate MichĂ©l wanted to show Low that his American representatives were advancing his priorities, even if that wasnât necessarily true. He told Higginbotham to deliver a straightforward message to the Chinese: The White House was working on a solution for the Guo matter, and details on the logistics of extradition would follow. It was a simple job, MichĂ©l assured Higginbotham.
That afternoon, Higginbotham walked to the Chinese Embassy off Connecticut Avenue. MichĂ©l had given him a number for one of the ambassadorâs aides, and Higginbotham called as he approached, asking for directions to the entrance. He was escorted into a conference room decorated with pictures of Chinese leaders meeting US presidents.
The ambassador, Cui Tiankai, entered after a short wait. âIâm here on behalf of my private client,â Higginbotham told Cui. âThis has nothing to do with the Department of Justice, and I am here in absolutely no official capacity.â After Higginbotham relayed the information instructed by MichĂ©l, Cui peppered him with questions: When would the deportation happen? Who would be getting in touch to make the arrangements? But Higginbotham had nothing more to tell him. Still, the ambassador seemed appreciative, and MichĂ©l later told Higginbotham Low was pleased with how the meeting had gone.
Higginbotham didnât know heâd triggered a diplomatic tripwire before setting foot inside the compoundâthe previous night, police officials from the Chinese Embassy had called their American counterparts to verify his identity. The matter soon landed with the DOJâs Office of the Inspector General, the agencyâs internal watchdog. Upon being summoned, Higginbotham explained that heâd gone to the embassy on MichĂ©lâs instructions.
Higginbotham had just become another piece in a growing set of US investigations into Lowâs and Chinaâs activities. By now, American officials were looking into Lum Davis and Broidy, too, as the pair continued working to get the DOJ to back away from Low and dislodge Guo from the US.
Wynnâs involvement was also increasing. With Lum Davis as facilitator, he spoke by phone with Sun at least eight times, beginning in June 2017. During the same period, according to legal filings and internal government documents, Wynn spoke about the Guo case with US officials including White House Chief of Staff Reince Priebus and his successor, John Kelly. And that August, while yachting with Broidy and his wife off the coast of Italy, Wynn called Trump and asked about the status of Guoâs potential extradition. Trump replied that heâd be happy to âhave themââSun and his teamââcome to see us at the White Houseâ to discuss the issue. (Lawyers for Wynn said his role was as a âmessenger conveying information,â rather than a lobbyist. In October a federal judge [dismissed a DOJ suit](https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2022-10-12/steve-wynn-wins-dismissal-of-doj-foreign-lobbying-case "Steve Wynn Persuades Judge to Toss US Foreign-Lobbying Case") that sought to compel him to register retroactively under the Foreign Agents Registration Act, which requires anyone lobbying for a foreign client to notify the government. Wynn didnât respond to a request for comment.)
Soon afterward, according to a DOJ interview with Kelly last year, a Chinese delegation showed up at the White House, claiming theyâd been told Trump had agreed to a meeting about Guoâs extradition. Kelly recalled that he blocked them from seeing the president, directing his staff to connect the group with the DOJ and the Department of State, which ultimately denied the request. He said the Chinese seemed stunned, because they were under the impression that the meeting was a âdone deal.â (Trump and Kelly didnât respond to requests for comment.)
![Donald Trump speaks with Steve Wynn before boarding Air Force One at the McCarran International Airport in Las Vegas, April 6, 2019.](https://assets.bwbx.io/images/users/iqjWHBFdfxIU/i6440wztKEKs/v0/640x-1.jpg)
Trump and Wynn in Las Vegas in 2019. Photographer: Al Drago/New York Times/Redux
Even with little progress being made toward Lowâs goals, he was encouraged enough that large sums of money kept coming into the US from Lucky Mark. In early August, $12.8 million arrived in an account belonging to one of MichĂ©lâs companies. (Kenner says the US government hasnât proven that Low controlled or directed the funds sent by Lucky Mark.) MichĂ©l then sent about $3 million to Broidyâs wifeâs law firm, which in turn sent $900,000 to Lum Davis. A further payment of $10 million came to Artemus, the other MichĂ©l-controlled company, later in the month.
## 7
---
âGeorge,â the agent asked, âyouâre a smart guy, right?ââŠâHelp me understand why youâre in the middle of all this. Why do they need you?â
It was Jan. 3, 2018, and Higginbotham was seated in a DOJ meeting room across from Harry Lidsky, a senior special agent from the inspector generalâs office with responsibility for investigating âinsider threats,â and one of his colleagues. Lidsky made a point of telling Higginbotham the door was unlocked. He was free to leave if he wanted.
Internal DOJ and FBI messages and memos reveal that MichĂ©l had by now become a key target of their investigation into Low. FBI agents considered him the âcurrent best opportunity to get a co-operating witnessâ and were seeking ways of âgetting leverage on MichĂ©l for the 1MDB investigation.â Higginbotham, who was a DOJ employee and thus in Lidskyâs jurisdiction, was a smaller fish, but he had played a role in getting money from Asia into MichĂ©lâs accounts.
At the time of the January interview, Higginbotham and Lidsky had spoken on several occasions, with Higginbotham insisting that nothing heâd done for MichĂ©l amounted to espionage or improper involvement in national security issues. He said it was all just business, with MichĂ©l helping Low for a âfinancial motive.â
Lidsky began his questions, focusing on the payments from Lucky Mark and an additional $41 million sent from a different Hong Kong company. Higginbotham had helped facilitate the transfers on MichĂ©lâs behalf, going as far as meeting with Low in Macau to discuss how best to move money into the US. Weeks later he told inquiring executives at MichĂ©lâs bank that Lucky Mark was a souvenir manufacturer that had hired MichĂ©l for a âcomplex civil litigation matterâ too sensitive to discuss. He made no mention of Low.
âYouâve had discussions with an individual by the name of Jho Low overseas in Southeast Asia,â Lidsky said. âIs that correct?â
âI have had discussions with him, yes.â
âAnd those discussions have included transferring money?â
âYes.â
Higginbotham told Lidsky heâd said Lucky Mark made souvenirs based on a description he found online. Lidsky replied that that was wrong. Lucky Markâs name was similar to a real souvenir manufacturerâs, but the government had concluded that the two entities were unconnected. Lidsky said to Higginbotham that this was a common Low tactic, intended to create confusion about where funds originated.
âGeorge, thereâs a problem here,â Lidsky told Higginbotham. âWe have a bank fraud issue. We have false statements.â The Lucky Mark sending money to MichĂ©l âwas started last year. They donât sell anything. They donât make anything. They donât have services. They donât do shit. Theyâre a shell company for money laundering.â
âOK,â Higginbotham replied.
âAnd donât say, âYeah, youâre right.â Donât say, âNo, I disagree.â Just take it all in for right now,â Lidsky said. âYouâre a good guy at heart. So weâve got to work to get you out of this.â
Continuing to squeeze Higginbotham, Lidsky laid out his case: âYouâre creating paperwork and doctoring up contracts that facilitate money from this guyâs company, which you knowâwhether you knew before, you certainly know nowâis a shell,â he said. âIn a matter of weeks, millions of dollars start flowingâ to Broidy, Lum Davis and MichĂ©l. âWhat did you get?â
âA buck seventyââ$170,000.
âPeanuts in the grand scheme of things.â
Lidsky continued: âYou have a huge opportunity to make your position a lot better, but you can also make it worse.â
Days later, Lidsky and Heuchling met with MichĂ©l in Los Angeles. After the agents asked him about the money heâd been receiving from Asia, according to Heuchlingâs written summary of the interview, MichĂ©l said the funds came from a Thai businessman who was investing in his entertainment projects. He held that Low had ânothing to doâ with his financial arrangements. When the agents asked MichĂ©l to account for Higginbothamâs visit to the Chinese Embassy, he had an explanation ready, Heuchling wrote. MichĂ©l said heâd been working to promote Chinese investment in Haiti and had asked Higginbotham to update Chinaâs ambassador in his stead.
The agents didnât buy it. When they told MichĂ©l they were aware heâd been doing business with Low, his story changed, according to Heuchlingâs summary. He acknowledged working with Low since early the previous year. (Kenner disputes Heuchlingâs summary and says MichĂ©l didnât change his account.)
Still, MichĂ©l didnât believe heâd done anything wrong. Heuchling wrote that MichĂ©l âwanted the interviewing agents to understand that because of his celebrity status and his connections, he travels all over the world and meets with all sorts of people.â
The FBI tried to convince MichĂ©l that it was in his best interest to cooperate with its 1MDB investigation. Later in January, Heuchling sent a text to his supervisor: âIf Pras comes around, and heâs not there yet, heâs going to realize he has a lot of time to work off.â Federal prosecutors in Washington were laying the groundwork to charge him with acting as an unregistered agent of a foreign government, an offense that carries a prison sentence of as much as 10 years. He also faced potential charges for election-law violations relating to Lowâs alleged political donations. According to people familiar with the matter, the government wanted MichĂ©l to plead guilty to a felony, forfeit the bulk of his wealth and agree to assist with other prosecutions to avoid a broader indictment.
MichĂ©l decided to reject the pleaâfor a number of reasons, Kenner says. âOne of the most significant is that it would make him a felon by admitting to willful acts he didnât believe were true.â
In late February, Heuchling wrote to another colleague to say that MichĂ©lâs then-attorney âpretty much told us heâs not comin back in.â
âDang,â the colleague replied. âHe knows whatâs coming, right?â
## 8
---
MichĂ©lâs trial is set to begin on March 27 in Washington. It will feature a rare convergence of superpower rivalry, Beltway politics and Hollywood glamour. Kenner, whoâs previously represented rap artists such as Snoop Dogg and Suge Knight, is seeking to call Obama and Trumpâboth targets of Lowâs influence effortsâas witnesses, though itâs uncertain whether either former president will appear. Meanwhile, DiCaprio is also on the witness list for the government, as is Higginbotham, who filings show is cooperating with prosecutors. His testimony will be crucial; Kenner says heâll argue that Higginbotham is violating his professional obligations as MichĂ©lâs former attorney by disclosing their interactions.
If convicted, MichĂ©l is likely to be treated far more harshly than the other Americans involved in Lowâs lobbying campaign. Higginbotham pleaded guilty in 2018 to a single count of conspiracy to make false statements to a bank, with any sentence to be determined later. (A representative for Higginbotham didnât respond to a detailed message seeking comment.)
Lum Davis was sentenced to two years in prison for her own guilty plea to one count of aiding and abetting violation of the Foreign Agents Registration Act. In October 2020, Broidy pleaded guilty to a count of conspiracy to violate FARA stemming from his work for Low, but he was pardoned by Trump three months later. The following April he signed a cooperation agreement with the DOJ, which promised not to prosecute him for other crimes that may arise in its investigation, in exchange for his testimony and other assistance.
And for the time being, thereâs little chance that the man who brought them all together will see a prison cell. Wanted on a range of charges by the US as well as Malaysia, Low is believed to be living in China with his family. Although heâs keeping a low profile, heâs occasionally spotted in public. One of the last sightings was in 2019, [at Shanghai Disneyland](https://twitter.com/TomWrightAsia/status/1564824047896080384 "@TomWrightAsia tweet").
## More On Bloomberg
---
`$= dv.el('center', 'Source: ' + dv.current().Link + ', ' + dv.current().Date.toLocaleString("fr-FR"))`