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The Straits Times, 3 Apr 04

Brewery man gets 42 years
By Selina Lum

Chalked up gambling losses of $62m after he swindled banks of $117m

HE STARTED with wagers of $200. Before long, Asia Pacific Breweries finance manager Chia Teck Leng was punting A$400,000 ($512,000) at a go.

Chia's jail term is longest for a commercial crime. By the time the law found out he had obtained the cash to bet by cheating banks here, he had blown $62 million in casinos around the world. In all, he swindled them out of $117 million over four years in Singapore's largest case of commercial fraud.

Yesterday, High Court Judge Tay Yong Kwang sent him to jail for 42 years, the longest jail term ever meted out for a commercial crime. The dubious honour was previously held by Singapore Airlines employee Teo Cheng Kiat, who embezzled $35 million from the airline over 13 years. He was jailed for 24 years, coincidentally by the same judge.

Chia was convicted after he pleaded guilty to six charges of forgery and eight charges of cheating yesterday. Another 32 charges were considered during sentencing. Between January 1999 and March last year, he faked documents to get four foreign banks to extend him credit. He claimed he was acting for his company, Asia Pacific Breweries, but was the only one doing the signing. He forged the signatures of APB directors by getting specimens from annual reports and internal documents. Chia channelled the money he swindled into his personal account at DBS Bank and then remitted it to casinos in Australia, Britain, Hong Kong, Malaysia, Cambodia and the Philippines to finance his gambling addiction.

The high-roller was so well-known in gambling circles, casino operators personally invited him to try his luck in their betting halls and ferried him there in private jets. He also bought a $150,000 Mercedes-Benz, a $530,000 apartment, and gave gifts totalling more than $300,000 to various people, including his girlfriend, Chinese national Li Jin, 22. She is now in jail for using a forged passport.

Chia was arrested on Sept 2 last year.Only $34.8 million has been recovered. Yesterday, his wife and two teenage sons were not in court, which was filled mainly with journalists and lawyers holding a watching brief for the four banks - who have filed suits against his company - and other parties.

That the scheme went undetected for more than four years 'must surely attest to the correctness of the prosecution's assertion that this was the work of a criminal genius,' said Justice Tay. He dismissed Chia's mitigation plea that the banks had approached him, offering to lend him cash; that they had been too naive, trusting and even negligent, making it 'too easy' for the APB manager to commit the crimes. 'Bankers knocking on his door were there to meet the man... to forge a business relationship, but the man they met was unfortunately in the business of forgery,' said the judge.

Reiterating a point he made when sentencing SIA's Teo - burglars should not blame owners for leaving their gates open or using inferior locks - he said forgers and fraudsters should not be decrying trusting and gullible victims. 'Crimes such as the present case...erode the open halls of trust and erect the high walls of suspicion.'

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