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Hin Leong oil tycoon OK Lim found guilty in S$151 million cheating, forgery trial

SINGAPORE — The founder of failed oil trading firm Hin Leong Trading was on Friday (May 10) convicted of cheating the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) and abetting forgery.

Hin Leong founder Lim Oon Kuin arriving at the State Courts on May 10, 2024.

Hin Leong founder Lim Oon Kuin arriving at the State Courts on May 10, 2024.

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SINGAPORE — The founder of failed oil trading firm Hin Leong Trading was on Friday (May 10) convicted of cheating the Hongkong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC) and abetting forgery.

Lim Oon Kuin, better known as OK Lim, will return to court for sentencing in October. The 82-year-old is represented by lawyers from Davinder Singh Chambers.

The case involved two bogus transactions for the sale of oil with China Aviation Oil (Singapore) Corporation and Unipec Singapore, and the submission of forged documents that led HSBC to disburse millions of dollars in loans to Hin Leong. 

This amounted to at least US$111.7 million (S$151 million), based on the three charges that the prosecution went ahead with out of the more than 100 charges that Lim faced.

The trial, which started last April, centred on who had directed Hin Leong staff to prepare the documents that made it seem like the oil trader had entered into the two purported transactions.

Delivering Friday's verdict, Principal District Judge Toh Han Li found that Lim had directed his employees to forge the documents for the fictitious transactions in March 2020.

The judge also said that Lim had "dishonest intent" in telling his staff to prepare the documents, and that he knew it was not correct to submit a discounting application for a deal that was not done.

Discounting refers to accounts receivable financing, where a seller "sells" unpaid invoices to a financial institution and typically receives a slightly discounted upfront payment, in circumstances where the credit terms for the transaction would mean that the seller would otherwise only receive payment from the buyer at a later date.

If the discounting application was approved, the bank would pay the seller the invoice amount and charge a fee for the transaction.

Lim was the managing director and 75 per cent shareholder of Hin Leong Trading, an oil trading company incorporated in Singapore, at the time of the offences in March 2020.

His defence at trial was that he never instructed staff to submit the discounting applications to HSBC. He claimed to have "slowed down" and delegated matters to colleagues from 2010 due to age. He stepped down in April 2020.

Specifically, for the purported China Aviation Oil deal, Lim denied ever instructing contracts executive Freddy Tan to prepare documents making it seem like the deal had been concluded.

For the purported Unipec deal, Lim also denied asking long-time employee Catherine Ong to submit a discounting application to HSBC, and said he only told her to be "mentally prepared" for such a sale.

The judge rejected these defences. He found that Lim continued to be the "big boss" of Hin Leong even after stepping down in April 2020, that he was "hands on" and that his approval was required for trades.

He also found that Lim's responses to police questioning were inconsistent with the defence's position that he had poor memory and was unable to concentrate when his statements were taken.

Judge Toh accepted evidence from Ong that she met with Lim every one to two weeks to update him on Hin Leong's cash flow situation and take instructions, including on invoice discounting.

He also accepted evidence from prosecution witnesses Tan and Serene Sing, Lim's personal assistant, on Lim's involvement.

Tan consistently said that Lim had asked him to prepare the documents for China Aviation Oil in his statements to the police in 2022.

For the purported Unipec deal, Sing testified that on March 19, 2020, Lim told her Hin Leong was close to concluding the deal but wanted to close the accounts receivable first, and asked her to prepare the discounting application.

Sing also said that Lim had asked her to use a different signature to sign on a bill of lading used as a supporting document for the application.

Judge Toh also accepted evidence from HSBC staff that if they had known the two underlying transactions were fictitious, they would not have approved the discounting applications.

Lim remains out on S$4 million bail. He, his son Evan Lim Chee Meng and daughter Lim Huey Ching are also defendants in a civil suit brought by liquidators seeking US$3.5 billion.

The punishment for cheating or abetting forgery for the purpose of cheating is up to 10 years in jail and a fine. CNA

For more reports like this, visit cna.asia.

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