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Malaysia 1MDB scandal
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Rapper Pras Michel exits federal court in Washington on April 3. Photo: Bloomberg

Fugees rapper Pras Michel convicted in US over lobbying campaigns with Malaysia’s Jho Low

  • Prosecutors said Michel agreed to funnel about US$2 million from Low into Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign in exchange for receiving millions of dollars
  • He was also accused of seeking to get the Trump administration to drop 1MDB-related probes into Low and to send fugitive billionaire Guo Wengui back to China

A jury on Wednesday convicted Grammy Award-winning rapper Prakazrel “Pras” Michel of The Fugees hip hop group on criminal charges that he conspired with a Malaysian financier to orchestrate a series of foreign lobbying campaigns aimed at influencing the US government under two presidents.

His conviction in federal court in Washington followed a trial that was filled with political intrigue and featured high-profile witnesses including Hollywood star Leonardo DiCaprio and former US attorney general Jeff Sessions. Michel endured a blistering cross-examination by prosecutors while testifying in his own defence.
Michel was charged with 10 counts of conspiracy, acting as an agent of a foreign government, witness tampering and falsifying campaign finance records. Prosecutors accused him of plotting with Malaysian businessman Jho Low to attempt to influence the administrations of presidents Barack Obama and Donald Trump.
Low, who also faces separate federal charges in New York that he embezzled US$4.5 billion from Malaysia’s 1MDB sovereign wealth fund, remains at large.
Protesters hold portraits of financier Jho Low depicted as a pirate during a protest in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia in April 2018. Photo: AP

The Fugees won two Grammy Awards for their bestselling 1996 album The Score. But by 2012, according to prosecutors, Michel was in desperate need of cash and found a solution through Low, who was known to throw elaborate parties and pay celebrities big sums of money.

Prosecutors said Michel agreed to funnel about US$2 million from Low into Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign in exchange for receiving millions of dollars. Because federal election law prohibits foreigners from donating to US campaigns, prosecutors said Michel masked the source of the funds.

Michel was also accused of seeking to convince the Trump-era Justice Department to drop civil and criminal investigations into Low over the 1MDB scandal and trying to lobby the US government on behalf of China to send Chinese billionaire and dissident Guo Wengui back to China.
In the witness box, Michel said the US$20 million Low paid him over the course of nine months in 2012 was to help Low secure a photo with Obama. Michel acknowledged that he used some of the money to pay for three of his friends to attend two political fundraisers for Obama’s 2012 campaign, but denied doing so at Low’s direction.

Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui denied bail in US fraud case

“Once he gave me the money, it was my discretion how I spent the money because it’s my money,” Michel told the jury, describing the payment as “free money”.

On whether he failed to register as a foreign agent, Michel told jurors that his lawyer George Higgenbotham never told him it was required by law. Michel also said he passed along information to the FBI about China’s desire to have Guo extradited amid concerns by China that Guo was “allegedly a criminal rapist”, saying he “thought it was something the FBI should know”.

Higgenbotham, who has since pleaded guilty for his role in the scheme, told jurors that he met the Chinese ambassador in Washington at Michel’s insistence to assure the Chinese that the Trump administration was working toward extraditing Guo.

Guo, who was never extradited, has since been indicted on unrelated fraud charges in New York.

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