Suharto: He faced a civil lawsuit filed by the government last year for embezzling funds from the Yayasan Supersemar Charitable Foundation. Money raised for scholarships allegedly went to banks and companies belonging to his children and cronies.
He was charged with embezzling US$600 million in public funds in 2000, but never set foot in court due to poor health. That case was dropped when his condition declined in 2006.
Youngest son Hutomo 'Tommy' Mandala Putra: An 18-month sentence for graft was overturned in the Supreme Court, but he was given a 15-year jail sentence in 2002 for ordering the assassination of a Supreme Court judge while on the run. He served five years.
His clove monopoly business in the 1990s is under investigation. Tobacco firms were forced to buy cloves - for cigarettes - from a board he chaired at marked-up prices, allegedly earning him 1.4 trillion rupiah (S$213 million).
The government is seeking to seize millions of dollars in his now-frozen bank account in BNP Paribas on British tax haven Guernsey island. One of his companies was said to have deposited US$45.6 million in the bank in July 1998, weeks after Mr Suharto stepped down.
Eldest daughter Siti Hardiyanti Rukmana: Prosecutors in 2003 dropped a probe into alleged graft in a deal involving her pipeline company and state-owned oil company Pertamina.
She was investigated in 2004 for allegedly receiving kickbacks over the sale of 100 British armoured vehicles to Indonesia in 1990s, but was never charged.
Second son Bambang Trihatmodjo: He was grilled in 2001 by police over acquisition of assets of a textile company but was never charged.
Half-brother Probosutedjo: He is serving four years in jail for graft involving the use of US$10 million in reforestation funds belonging to the Forestry Ministry.