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Today, 3 Apr 04

The man who bet $400,000 a time
by Jose Raymond

When caught Chia was said to have contributed $62m to casino coffers around the world

SPORTING a dark grey shirt, short-cropped hair and black-rimmed spectacles, a small man sat in the dock in the High Court on Friday, waiting to learn of his fate. The mild demeanour of Chia Teck Leng belied the enormity of the crime he was charged with – Singapore's biggest financial fraud ever.

Through the afternoon, terms such as "criminal genius" and "master rogue" were used to describe a man that could go unnoticed in any neighbourhood Kopitiam. At the end of the day, the 44-year-old former finance manager was sentenced to 42 years in prison, after he had pleaded guilty to 14 charges of forgery and criminal breach of trust, with another 32 related charges taken into consideration.

Over the course of five years, the former Asia Pacific Breweries (APB) executive managed to cheat four foreign banks out of an incredible $117 million, of which only $34.8 million has been recovered. The money was spent mostly on an escalating gambling habit at casinos.

The $200-a-hand bets he placed in 1998 had grown into obscene $400,000-a-hand wagers by the time he was caught last year. In total, it is estimated that Chia alone contributed $62 million to casino coffers around the world before the authorities finally caught up him.

The prosecution, led by deputy public prosecutor Thong Chee Kun, revealed how Chia's addiction to gambling led him to shape an audacious plan to cheat the four banks only days after he began his job as a finance manager at APB in January 1999. "This was not a one-off offence committed on a surge of sudden impulse. The offences required the systematic planning and pre-meditation of a criminal genius," said Mr Thong.

The court, surprisingly bereft of any members of the Chia family, heard that the financial manager was already more than $1 million in debt before he joined APB due to accumulated losses in gambling. He then proceeded to open bank accounts using forged documents under APB's name and later obtained loans and credit lines from the four banks, money which he later used as his personal gambling account.

As his gambling history was read out like an improbable Hollywood script, Chia remained calm, looking straight at Judge Tay Yong Kwang, perhaps resigned to his fate. But he broke down when his lawyer, Mr Edmond Pereira, read out parts of a letter which Chia's two sons had addressed to Justice Tay. The hand-written note moved Justice Tay to urge the two teenagers to "continue loving your father as his guilt is confined to the charges and none accuses him of being a bad dad".

During mitigation, the defence tried to suggest that Chia had been infected with the "gambling disease" and obsessed on how to return the money he was losing at the tables. "This was clearly reflected by the way he gambled. He was seeking the highest bets available anywhere so that he could recover the amounts he had lost and be able to repay the amounts outstanding to the banks," said Mr Pereira.

Mr Pereira also said that when Chia applied for the credit facilities with forged signatures, he had expected the banks to check on the authenticity of the documents and the signatures. But Justice Tay dismissed this, saying: "…burglars should not be blaming house owners for leaving their gates open or for using inferior locks. Similarly, forgers and fraudsters should not be decrying trusting or even gullible victims."

Justice Tay added: "This is a case of a finance manager responsible for the accounting integrity of a reputable company turning forger and fraudster soon after joining the company. He was no mere corporate sentry; he was the commander of the guards." . Justice Tay also agreed with the prosecution's assertion that Chia's actions had damaged Singapore's reputation as an honest and efficient financial hub. He said: "Crimes such as the present case strike at the heart of banking and commerce. "They erode the open halls of trust and erect high walls of suspicion."

Mr Pereira said after sentencing that 42 years was 'a crushing sentence' and would look at the grounds of decision before advising his client on his next course of action.

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