Ninth convict in $3b money laundering case deported to the UK: ICA
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Wang Dehai was deported on July 6 after serving about 11 months of his 16-month jail term.
PHOTO: CHINA POLICE
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SINGAPORE - Wang Dehai, the last of 10 foreigners to plead guilty in the $3 billion money laundering case, has been deported to the UK.
He was deported on July 6 after serving about 11 months of his 16-month jail term.
The Immigration and Checkpoints Authority (ICA) told The Straits Times on July 8 that Wang, 35, has been barred from re-entering Singapore.
The Cypriot national, who was originally from China, was sentenced to 16 months’ jail in June after pleading guilty to one money laundering charge.
Wang agreed to forfeit more than $49 million of his assets to the state.
On July 2, Minister of State for Home Affairs Sun Xueling said in Parliament that, while those with multiple passports can indicate which country they would like to be deported to, Singapore will deport them to countries most likely to accept them.
Wang’s deportation means that nine of the 10 convicted in Singapore’s largest money laundering case have left the country.
Su Wenqiang and Wang Baosen were the first two convicted men to leave Singapore
Su Baolin and Su Haijin were deported to Cambodia on May 25 and 28, respectively, while Vang Shuiming was deported to Japan on June 1.
Su Baolin and Su Haijin were each sentenced to 14 months’ jail in April. Vang was sentenced to 13 months and six weeks’ jail in May. The three men each served around 9½ months of their jail terms.
Chen Qingyuan, Zhang Ruijin and Lin Baoying were deported to Cambodia on June 15.
This leaves Su Jianfeng, who was sentenced to 17 months’ jail in June,
The 10 foreigners were arrested in August 2023 are on the run.
An ICA spokesman said in June that the convicts were deported on the earliest possible flights upon completing their jail sentences.
They were escorted directly from prison to the airport for deportation
ICA said its technology for immigration clearance at Singapore’s checkpoints enables it to detect deported individuals, even if they attempt to re-enter the country using another identity or passport.

