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Guo Wengui
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Chinese businessman Guo Wengui holds a news conference in New York in November 2018. Photo: Reuters

No bail for exiled Chinese businessman Guo Wengui

  • A US appeal court said he should remain in jail while awaiting trial for allegedly defrauding investors of a total of over US$1 billion
  • Prosecutors say Guo spent some of the money on luxuries, including a US$37 million yacht, a US$3.5 million Ferrari and a New Jersey mansion
Guo Wengui

A US appeal court in Manhattan on Wednesday said the exiled Chinese businessman Guo Wengui should remain in jail while he awaits trial over an alleged fraud that federal prosecutors have said exceeds US$1 billion.

The 2nd US Circuit Court of Appeals said it did not have a “definite and firm conviction” that a trial judge erred in rejecting Guo’s proposed US$25 million bail package.

Lawyers for Guo did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

Guo Wengui appears in New York in March on charges of leading a complex conspiracy to defraud online followers out of more than US$1 billion. Courtroom sketch: Jane Rosenberg via Reuters

Guo, a critic of China’s Communist Party and business associate of former US President Donald Trump’s one-time adviser Steve Bannon, has been jailed in Brooklyn since his March arrest. His trial is scheduled for April.

Prosecutors have said Guo defrauded thousands of followers who invested in a media company, cryptocurrency and other ventures, and spent some proceeds on luxuries including a US$37 million yacht, a US$3.5 million Ferrari and a New Jersey mansion.

Also known as Ho Wan Kwok and Miles Kwok, Guo has pleaded not guilty to 11 charges including securities fraud, wire fraud and concealing money laundering.

Chinese exile Guo Wengui ordered to pay US$134 million in US yacht case

In denying bail, US District Judge Analisa Torres on April 20 said prosecutors had established that if released Guo would be a serious flight risk and pose a danger to the community, and that there was no assurance he would appear in court.

Lawyers for Guo argued that he was not a flight risk, and that the Manhattan district court had released the late swindler Bernard Madoff and FTX cryptocurrency exchange founder Sam Bankman-Fried on less restrictive bail terms than Guo proposed.

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