On December 20, 2024 the Malaysian state fund has initiated legal proceedings against Amicorp Group and its CEO, Toine Knipping. The lawsuit, filed in the
British Virgin Islands, seeks over $1 billion in damages for alleged
fraud. 1MDB claims that Amicorp, a
Hong Kong-based corporate services provider, played a crucial role in facilitating fraudulent transactions exceeding $7 billion between 2009 and 2014. The fund alleges that Amicorp orchestrated a sophisticated scheme involving numerous shell companies, fake transactions, and deceptive financial arrangements that concealed the actual source and flow of misappropriated funds. According to the lawsuit, the misappropriated assets were allegedly funneled through various locations, including Barbados,
Curaçao, Hong Kong, and the British Virgin Islands. 1MDB asserts that Amicorp granted access to the international financial system, enabling fund entities and banking services to perpetuate the cycling of assets. This created an illusion that 1MDB's investments were generating returns when, in reality, they had been misappropriated. In response to the allegations, Amicorp Group has denied any wrongdoing and stated its intention to dispute the $1 billion legal claim. The company maintains that the claim is inaccurate and that it will be left to the British Virgin Islands Court of Justice to assess the suit.
Debts and rating downgrade It was reported that by early 2015, 1MDB had accumulated debts of nearly RM 42 billion. Further alleged financial challenges caused 1MDB bonds to trade at a record low. Additionally, the Malaysian cabinet rejected a requested RM 3 billion cash injection by 1MDB, narrowing its options to pay off its debts on time.
Donation explanation from the government On 3 August 2015, the MACC stated that the RM 2.6 billion that had been banked into Najib's personal account came from donors, not 1MDB, but did not elaborate on who the donors were or why the funds were transferred, nor why this explanation had taken so long to emerge since the allegations were first made on 2 July 2015.
UMNO Kuantan division chief Wan Adnan Wan Mamat later claimed that the RM 2.6 billion was from Saudi Arabia as thanks for fighting
ISIS. He further claimed that the Muslim community in the Philippines as well as southern Thailand had also received similar donations, and that since the donations were made to Najib personally as opposed to UMNO, the funds were deposited into Najib's personal accounts. Saudi Foreign Minister
Adel al-Jubeir said he was aware of the donation, and said that it was a genuine donation with nothing expected in return. Attorney-general Mohamad Apandi Ali has said that the donation was from one of the sons of the late Saudi King
Abdullah, namely
Turki bin Abdullah Al Saud. In an interview with
ABC News, WSJ finance editor Ken Brown stated that the money did not come from the Saudis and they had evidence that it came from companies related to 1MDB.
Bank Negara actions Using the premise that 1MDB had used inaccurate or incomplete disclosure of information, Bank Negara, in early 2016, revoked permissions previously granted to 1MDB for investments abroad totalling $1.83 billion. Bank Negara then called for the Attorney General to begin criminal prosecution of 1MDB after completing its own investigations into 1MDB fund transfers. 1MDB responded that they were unable to repatriate the $1.83 billion demanded by Bank Negara because the funds had already been utilized.
Police reports The scandal took a dramatic twist on 28 August 2015 when a member of Najib Razak's own UMNO party filed a civil suit against him alleging a breach of duties as trustee and that he defrauded party members by failing to disclose receipt of the donated funds, and account for their use. This suit was filed in the
Kuala Lumpur High Court and also named party executive secretary Abdul Rauf Yusof. Expressing fear that Najib Razak would wield influence to remove any member of UMNO "for the sole purpose of avoiding liability", the court was also being moved for an injunction to restrain UMNO, its Supreme Council, state liaison body, divisions and branches from removing the nominal plaintiff as a party member pending the determination of the suit. The plaintiff was also seeking a repayment amounting to $650 million, the amount allegedly deposited by Najib to a Singapore bank, an account of all monies that he had received in the form of donations, details of all monies in an AmPrivate Banking Account, allegedly belonging to Najib, along with damages, costs, and other reliefs. One of the UMNO representatives, Anina Saadudin, who filed the lawsuit, was immediately expelled from the party. Another police report was filed by a
Johor UMNO member, Abdul Rashed Jamaludin, against Najib Razak, over the funds that went into his bank account and other wrongdoings at 1MDB. Another UMNO member, Khairuddin Abu Hassan, and his lawyer Matthias Chang, had submitted evidence on the 1MDB scandal to the Swiss attorney general for investigation into whether any Swiss banks had done business with 1MDB. Khairuddin also lodged a police report in Hong Kong against Najib Razak and Jho Low, pertaining to four companies: Alliance Assets International, Cityfield Enterprises, Bartingale International and Wonder Quest Investment, which had purported dealings with 1MDB. Khairuddin and Matthias were barred from leaving Malaysia. Khairuddin and Matthias were charged under the
Security Offenses Act (SOSMA) under the pretext of sabotaging Malaysia's banking and financial sector.
Local lawsuits The opposition
People's Justice Party (PKR) filed a lawsuit against Najib Razak,
Tengku Adnan Tengku Mansor, 1MDB and the
Election Commission accusing them of violating election laws on campaign expenses, using funds from 1MDB. However, the Malaysian High Court threw out the suit, stating PKR had no legal standing to bring the suit against Najib and 1MDB. Former Prime Minister Mahathir has filed a lawsuit against Najib Razak for alleged interference in government investigations on 1MDB and the RM 2.6 billion political donation.
Government actions Following criticisms of the 1MDB issue, Deputy Prime Minister
Muhyiddin Yassin was removed from office and his position was given to then-Home Minister
Ahmad Zahid Hamidi. Also removed from office was Rural and Regional Development Minister
Shafie Apdal who was also critical of the 1MDB issue. Both were eventually expelled from UMNO in June 2016. After the
2018 election, the newly elected prime minister,
Mahathir Mohamad, reopened Malaysian investigations into the scandal. The attorney general
Abdul Gani Patail, who was heading a multi-agency task force investigating claims of misappropriations of funds allegedly involving Najib Razak and 1MDB, was dismissed and his position given to
Mohamed Apandi Ali, a former Federal Court judge. Additionally, the Public Action Committee that was investigating the purported losses in 1MDB was indefinitely postponed due to four of its members being given positions in Najib Razak's cabinet, namely the PAC chairman Nur Jazlan Mohamed, Reezal Merican Naina Merican, Wilfred Madius Tangau and Mas Ermieyati Samsudin. The news publications The Edge Malaysia and The Edge Financial Daily were suspended, for three months in July 2015 for allegedly publishing false reports about 1MDB issues, by the Malaysian Home Ministry. Also in 2015, the website
Sarawak Report was blocked by
Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission, which regulates Internet services in Malaysia. The Malaysian police also issued an arrest warrant for
Clare Rewcastle Brown, who was managing the Sarawak Report, alleging involvement in activities detrimental to parliamentary democracy and disseminating false reports about Prime Minister Najib. The police also arrested UMNO member Khairuddin Abu Hassan after he lodged police reports in London, Singapore, France and Hong Kong regarding alleged financial improprieties by 1MDB. According to his lawyer, Khairuddin was going to the United States to meet with the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to urge them to probe 1MDB over money laundering. However, the FBI's New York City office confirmed to the WSJ that no agent had arranged to meet Khairuddin or had any previous contact with him. Former
Kedah Menteri Besar Mukhriz Mahathir resigned his office on 3 February 2016, saying he did so because he had been told by Najib Razak that he was in the wrong by criticising him and 1MDB publicly. Four months later, in June, Mukhriz was expelled from UMNO. His father, Mahathir Mohamad, who had been Malaysia's fourth prime minister and who had been a Najib supporter since Najib assumed office, withdrew his support and quit UMNO later that same month. Opposition member of parliament
Rafizi Ramli was arrested and charged under the
Official Secrets Act by the police and the government for leaking information about the Auditor General's report on 1MDB. The Home Ministry stated that they and
Interpol had been unsuccessful in locating various individuals linked to 1MDB to help in facilitating their investigations, including business tycoon Jho Low, 1MDB's former senior executives Casey Tang Keng Chee and Jasmine Loo Ai Swan, SRC International managing director Nik Faisal Ariff Kamil, and Deutsche Bank country manager Yusof Annuar Yaacob. Internet access was blocked by the
Malaysian Communications and Multimedia Commission (MCMC), to websites including
Medium.com, a
social journalism platform over just a single article posted by
Sarawak Report. Another website,
Asia Sentinel, was blocked after carrying a Sarawak Report article related to MACC completing a probe that allegedly resulted in 37 charges being drawn up against Najib.
The Malaysian Insider was also blocked and its journalists were investigated for carrying a report alleging that the MACC had found enough evidence in its investigations into Najib to charge him for corruption. Blocks were removed shortly after the handover of power from Najib's government in the
2018 general election.
Ramifications and debt restructuring default, 2016 The Malaysian Public Accounts Committee (PAC) inquiry into 1MDB revealed that the management of the fund acted without the board's approval and misled auditors several times, calling for the police to investigate its former manager. The PAC also found that the board of directors in which Najib Razak was the chairman failed in giving proper oversight of the fund's finances. The 1MDB board of directors immediately submitted their resignations after the PAC findings were made public. The PAC report stated that US$3.5 billion was paid to a company, Aabar Investments PJS, but IPIC released a statement that neither it or its subsidiary Aabar Investments PJS have any links to a British Virgin Islands-incorporated firm Aabar BVI or received any money from that BVI firm. International Petroleum Investment Company made an announcement in a filing in the
London Stock Exchange that 1MDB failed to make a US$1.1 billion payment as part of its
debt restructuring agreement, and that the debt deal between the two companies has been terminated.
Renewed investigations 2018-2021 After the
14th Malaysian general election on 9 May 2018 which marked a historic defeat for the
Barisan Nasional coalition led by Najib Razak,
Pakatan Harapan formed a new government led by Prime Minister
Mahathir Mohamad. The government set up a special task force headed by former Attorney General
Tan Sri Abdul Gani Patail to renew investigations into the 1MDB scandal. The government barred Najib Razak from leaving the country, and the police seized cash and valuable items amounting to between RM 900 million and RM 1.1 billion ($220 million and $269 million) from residential units linked to Najib and his wife
Rosmah Mansor. As claimed by the police, this was the biggest seizure in Malaysian history, with the seized items comprising more than 12,000 pieces of jewelry, 423 valuable watches and 567 handbags made up of 37 luxury brands. Najib was subsequently arrested by the MACC. In September 2018, he faced 25 charges relating to abuse of power and money laundering amounting to RM 2.3 billion ($556 million), on top of seven charges with criminal breach of trust and power abuse brought against him in the preceding two months. As of April 2019, he stands with 42 charges.
Equanimity was seized by Indonesian authorities in 2018 and returned to Malaysia after being allegedly purchased by
Jho Low with embezzled 1MDB funds. The government has also issued arrest warrants against Jho Low and former director of SRC International Nik Faisal Ariff Kamil in a graft probe related to the state fund 1MDB. On 28 June 2018, two days before the end of his employment contract, 1MDB sacked its president and chief executive officer Arul Kanda on grounds of dereliction of duties. Media reports from June 2018 also indicate that the MACC froze bank accounts associated with UMNO, purportedly in relation to investigations into the 1MDB matter. In August 2018, Malaysian police filed criminal charges against Jho Low and his father Larry Low over money laundering of US$457 million, which was allegedly stolen from 1MDB and most of the cash used for purchasing the superyacht
Equanimity. From 29 October through 28 November 2018, the
Equanimity was up for auction by investigators (pending a US$1 million deposit). It was eventually sold to the
Genting Group at $126 million. In December 2018, the Attorney-General Chambers of Malaysia filed criminal charges against subsidiaries of Goldman Sachs, their former employees Tim Leissner and Roger Ng Chong Hwa, former 1MDB employee Jasmine Loo, and Jho Low in connection with 1MDB bond offerings arranged and underwritten by Goldman Sachs in 2012 and 2013. The prosecutors were seeking criminal fines in excess of $2.7 billion misappropriated from the bonds proceeds, $600 million in fees received by Goldman Sachs, as well as custodial sentences against the individuals accused. During an investigation into the 1MDB scandal in January 2020, Najib Tun Razak asked the then UAE crown prince,
Mohammed Bin Zayed to help fabricate a loan agreement showing his stepson had received financing from IPIC and not from 1MDB in an attempt to cover up the scandal, according to the audio clips revealed by Malaysian anti-corruption officials. On 28 July 2020, Najib was found guilty in all seven charges related to SRC and was sentenced to 12 years' jail and a fine of RM 210 million ($49.5 million). Respectively on 8 December 2021 and 23 August 2022, the Court of Appeal and the Federal Court upheld the conviction and sentence of Najib in all the SRC cases, in which Najib was found guilty of misappropriating RM42mil from the company's coffers. On 1 September 2022, Najib's wife
Rosmah Mansor was also found guilty of three counts of corruption by the Malaysian High Court and sentenced to both a ten-year term of imprisonment and a RM970 million fine. On 26 December 2025, Najib Razak was found guilty on all 25 counts of charges related to over $1.0 billion of 1MDB funds that had made its way into his personal bank accounts. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison and fined $2.8 billion by the High Court of Malaysia, but will appeal the judgement. == Investigations by foreign law enforcement agencies ==