
Billionaire’s bail rules tightened: No closed-door massages
NEW YORK — A judge tightened security Monday at the luxury Manhattan apartment where a Chinese billionaire convicted of bribing United Nations diplomats will likely reside under 24-hour guard until sentencing.
U.S. District Judge Vernon S. Broderick rejected a request by prosecutors to immediately imprison 69-year-old Ng Lap Seng after his conviction over a week ago on bribery and money laundering charges. The charges carry a potential prison term lasting decades, though his actual sentence would be far less.
“It is literally difficult to imagine a defendant with a greater incentive to flee,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Daniel Richenthal.
A jury convicted Ng of paying over $1.7 million in bribes to two ambassadors from 2010 to 2015 to arrange support to construct a huge U.N. conference centre in Macau, where he resides. No sentencing date has been set.