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Malaysia’s Jho Low paid a rapper to lobby Donald Trump to drop 1MDB investigation, US court hears

  • Grammy-winning rapper Pras Michel of hip-hop group the Fugees is accused of illegally lobbying Trump on the fugitive Malaysian financier’s behalf
  • Part the secretive lobbying effort involved trying to set up a golf game between Trump and Malaysia’s then-PM Najib Razak, a government witness said

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Jho Low paid US$8 million and promised as much as US$75 million more if the US Justice Department was successfully persuaded to walk away from its civil forfeiture case against 1MDB, a court heard. Photo: Sam Tsang
Former top Republican fundraiser Elliott Broidy gave federal jurors in the US an inside account of how he and Grammy-winning rapper Pras Michel reaped payouts from a Malaysian tycoon to lobby President Donald Trump’s administration to help end a federal investigation into the 1MDB scandal.
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At Michel’s criminal trial in Washington, Broidy testified on Tuesday about how the musician assembled a team in 2017 to get the US Justice Department to drop its civil investigation of Jho Low, who’s accused of embezzling billions of dollars from Malaysian development fund 1MDB. Using Low’s money, Michel paid Broidy to use his connections in the Trump administration in “hopes of helping to resolve the 1MDB matter,” the former fundraiser said.

Broidy, who is a crucial government witness, confirmed he, Michel and others agreed to use influence on behalf of Low, a foreign national. Broidy pleaded guilty in October 2020 to conspiring to violate the Foreign Agents Registration Act and was pardoned by Trump weeks later.

Pras Michel, former member of the Fugees, exits federal court in Washington on Monday. He is accused of illegally lobbying on Low’s behalf and acting as an unregistered agent of China. Photo: Bloomberg
Pras Michel, former member of the Fugees, exits federal court in Washington on Monday. He is accused of illegally lobbying on Low’s behalf and acting as an unregistered agent of China. Photo: Bloomberg

On cross examination, Broidy confirmed he didn’t discuss the requirement to register as a foreign agent with Michel or Low and didn’t receive legal advice about FARA until he was being investigated.

Michel, a member of the hip-hop group the Fugees, is accused of illegally lobbying on Low’s behalf and acting as an unregistered agent of China in pushing Trump’s administration to extradite Chinese billionaire Guo Wengui, a vocal critic of Beijing. Michel is also accused of funnelling Low’s illegal donations into the 2012 campaign of President Barack Obama.

Broidy, a Los Angeles money manager, was one of three top fundraisers for Trump in 2016 when he joined Low’s plot to cash in on his connections. Low paid US$8 million to Broidy and promised as much as US$75 million more if he succeeded in persuading the Justice Department to walk away from its civil forfeiture case against 1MDB. Broidy paid a portion to Nickie Lum Davis, a Hawaii businesswoman, who also pleaded guilty to the scheme.

During his testimony, Broidy said Davis, who was friends with Michel, came to him with the 1MDB “business opportunity”. Broidy described Davis as the “intermediary” between him, Michel and Low. He said the group met with Low in Bangkok to discuss the 1MDB matter and financial compensation.

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