MONEY LAUNDERING?
Throughout the cross-examination, Mr Low said his article, titled “Singapore Mansion Deals Are Increasingly Shrouded in Secrecy”, was not about money laundering, but had merely made references to it.
He was asked how he came to include a portion in the article which stated: “That’s especially been the case after a S$3 billion money laundering scandal erupted last year and drew attention to how some China-born Singapore residents were staying in mansions that they rented for as much as S$150,000 a month. Ten money launderers have since been convicted, jailed and deported.”
This reference follows a quote by Mr William Wong, the founder of a property agency, in the article.
Asked by Justice Audrey Lim if the paragraph was in Mr Low’s own words, Mr Low replied that he had been paraphrasing Mr Wong.
Justice Lim then asked if Mr Wong had referred to the entirety of the portion in his correspondence with Mr Low.
Mr Low said “yes”, pointing to the phrase “money laundering saga” mentioned in correspondence. This prompted the High Court judge to note that not all the details in that portion, including the reference to China-born Singapore citizens, were said by Mr Wong.
At one point, Justice Lim called on Bloomberg’s lawyer, Senior Counsel Sreenivasan Narayanan, to help Mr Low.
Upon further questioning by the judge, Mr Low admitted that Mr Wong had not mentioned China-born Singapore residents or other details in the portion.
Mr Singh then seized on the admission, thanking the judge for her intervention before turning to Mr Low. “Your evidence that you paraphrased him is a lie and you got called out by it because the court asked you to show the reference … and not even your lawyer could do it.”
Mr Sreenivasan immediately stood up to object to the characterisation, telling Mr Singh not to get “personal”.
“In other words, you were seeking to mislead the court,” Mr Singh said. Mr Low disagreed.





