spoiler
Vietnamese property tycoon Truong My Lan is in a race for her life.
On Tuesday, the 68-year-old will hear the verdict in her appeal against the death sentence handed down on her in April for masterminding the world’s biggest bank fraud.
It was a rare and shocking verdict - she is one of very few women in Vietnam to be sentenced to death for a white collar crime.
The court found she had secretly controlled Saigon Commercial Bank, the country’s fifth biggest lender, and taken out loans and cash over more than 10 years through a web of shell companies, amounting to a total of $44 billion (£34.5 billion).
Of that prosecutors say $27 billion was misappropriated, and $12 billion was judged to have been embezzled, the most serious financial crime for which she was sentenced to death.
However, the law in Vietnam states that if she can pay back 75% of what she took, her sentence will be commuted to life imprisonment.
During her trial in April Truong My Lan, who had been chairwoman of the real estate firm, Van Thinh Phat Group, was sometimes defiant. But in the recent hearings for her appeal against the sentence she has been more contrite.
She has said she was embarrassed to have been such a drain on the state, and that her only thought was to pay back what she had taken.
Born into a Sino-Vietnamese family in Ho Chi Minh City, Truong My Lan started as a market stall vendor, selling cosmetics with her mother. She began buying land and property after the Communist Party introduced economic reform in 1986. By the 1990s, she owned a large portfolio of hotels and restaurants.
When she was convicted and sentenced in April, she was the chairwoman of a prominent real estate firm, Van Thinh Phat Group. It was a dramatic moment in the "Blazing Furnaces" anti-corruption campaign led by then-Communist Party Secretary-General, Nguyen Phu Trong.
All of the remaining 85 defendants were convicted. Four were sentenced to life in jail, while the rest were given prison terms ranging from 20 years to three years suspended. Truong My Lan's husband and niece received jail terms of nine and 17 years respectively.
The State Bank of Vietnam is believed to have spent many billions of dollars recapitalising Saigon Commercial Bank to prevent a wider banking panic. The prosecutors argued that her crimes were "huge and without precedent" and did not justify leniency.
Truong My Lan’s lawyers say she is working as fast as she can to find the $9 billion needed. But cashing in her assets is proving difficult.
Some are luxury properties in the Vietnamese capital, Ho Chi Minh City, which could, in theory, be sold quite quickly. Others are in the form of shares or stakes in other businesses or property projects.
In all the state has identified more than a thousand different assets linked to the fraud. These have been frozen by the authorities for now. The BBC understands the tycoon has also reached out to friends to raise loans for her to help reach the target.
Her lawyers are arguing for leniency from the judges on financial grounds. They say that while she is under sentence of death it will be hard for her to negotiate the best price for selling her assets and investments, and so harder for her to raise $9 billion.
She can do much better if under a life sentence instead, they say.
“The total value of her holdings actually exceeds the required compensation amount,” lawyer Nguyen Huy Thiep told the BBC.
“However, these require time and effort to sell, as many of the assets are real estate and take time to liquidate. Truong My Lan hopes the court can create the most favourable conditions for her to continue making compensation.”
Few expect the judges to be moved by these arguments. If, as expected, they reject her appeal, Truong My Lan will in effect be in a race with the executioner to raise the funds she needs.
Vietnam treats the death penalty as a state secret. The government does not publish how many people are on death row, though human rights groups say there are more than 1,000 and that Vietnam is one of the world’s biggest executioners.
Typically there are long delays, often many years before sentences are carried out, although prisoners are given very little notice. If Truong My Lan can recover the $9 billion before that happens, her life will most likely be spared.
Her lawyers are arguing for leniency from the judges on financial grounds. They say that while she is under sentence of death it will be hard for her to negotiate the best price for selling her assets and investments, and so harder for her to raise $9 billion.
Lmao at this. They should make a reality TV show out of it
This is where we find out no one person can make that much money, not even if they beg.
They say that while she is under sentence of death it will be hard for her to negotiate the best price for selling her assets and investments, and so harder for her to raise $9 billion.
They wrote this like anyone would feel bad for her. Communist states executing these people only evokes feelings of for a typical westerner as far as I've seen
What if we start a gofundme
To pay the executioner to still do it even if she gets the cash
I volunteer to be in charge of the $9.000.000.005 anti-bail fund and hereby pledge $5. Come on Hexbear, we can raise the rest.
What a noob, do all your embezzlement shit in the USA where financial crimes are legal.
In America for this shit instead of the death penalty you get a bailout
If she did that in the US, it wouldn't just be legal, she'd have a cover story in Forbes and an invitation to a cabinet position.
Ooooh sorry. You only came up with $8.99999 billion.
*guillotine blade falls*
Can thry play a Price is Right womp-womp when they declare the sentence?
We should do a lathe project that petitions Elon Musk or some other Western billionaire ghoul to bail her out (and then she ends up being executed anyway). It would be an incredibly funny bit.
Truanon rule: keep the greater part of your plunder liquid, in case Communists force you to pay it back at gunpoint
Luck Be A Landlord type phenomenon where if a billionaire commits a financial crime, they get a $1B fine, which doubles every month until they can't pay it. Once they fail to pay they get the wall.
i hope the vietnamese people and those entrusted with positions of responsibility within their their institutions know how much i love them for having and enforcing laws like this.
can you even imagine if like 10% of the assholes who grift this country openly had to suddenly scramble and convert their durable capital investments from a jail cell in order to raise a big enough cut of what they stole to avoid getting executed? panic mode time attack! dig for those quarters lol.
that's like the only game show that should exist. if they manage to pull it off, the people are well on their way to remuneration and the offender "wins" the prize of life in the clink, scrubbing toilets and doing laundry. if they don't, lmao. either way, i'm cheering.
I found a YouTube link in your comment. Here are links to the same video on alternative frontends that protect your privacy:
I don't support the death penalty in any instance, but situations like this make it very tempting.
I 100% support the death penalty for billionaires
Not just for financial crimes, for like jaywalking and littering
Eh, if they could rehabilitate Puyi, they can rehabilitate anyone.
with a bit of pluck and help from some local teens, she's about to put on the greatest jukebox musical this town's ever seen.