
Notorious conman behind bars after 14-year manhunt
'Because it was so difficult and it took so long. He raised every single obstacle that he possibly could to avoid ending up at a substantive hearing.'
Van Leewarden said parallel recovery action against Ali and WGA had recovered $7m, which was distributed in 2022 and gave his clients returns of 18c on the dollar.
'We would regard 10% as a good recovery. So 18% is really good,' he said.
'And then, of course, subsequent to that, he's arrested and he's convicted. I suppose it's a small consolation to the victims, some of them were completely decimated, financially, emotionally and physically.'
Warden said Syed is contesting the guilty verdicts, and the Swiss justice system extends the presumption of innocence until proven guilty until the appeals process is exhausted.
Ahsan Ali Syed Syed ran a seemingly well-resourced finance operation with lavish offices in Switzerland and Bahrain. Photo / Supplied
Van Leewarden was unwilling to identify the fraud victim he represented, citing privacy and legal privilege.
Reports from the time WGA was active in 2010-11 reveal Wellington Phoenix owner and Apprentice New Zealand host Terry Serepisos and former NZ Mint owner Gary McNabb were among the New Zealand victims of the multimillion-dollar fraud.
Syed had run a seemingly well-resourced finance operation with lavish offices in Switzerland and Bahrain, and claimed to have $8 billion available in finance.
WGA made generous-looking loan offers to a number of businessmen and developers suffering through the post-Global Financial Crisis credit crunch in 2010-11.
No clients ever received loans, Swiss prosecutors claim, with WGA allegedly just a vehicle to fleece victims.
'[The] sole interest and intention was that these companies would transfer the largest possible sums of money to [Syed] or the Western Gulf Advisory group and that he could use these sums of money to finance a luxurious lifestyle for himself and his family,' the indictment said.
Proceeds were used by Syed to buy a private jet, a football team, and employ a small army of publicists, security guards and assistants. During Serepisos' struggles against liquidation in late 2010 and 2011, Syed was said to be considering becoming a co-owner of the Wellington Phoenix.
Van Leewarden first became involved chasing Syed by representing McNabb, but over time he signed up other victims – mostly from Australia, but also one in Russia – to broaden the case, split costs and increase possible recoveries.
The trail led from Syed's birthplace in India to London, where he presented as a finance tycoon and conducted due diligence purportedly considering an offer for English Premier League team Blackburn Rovers.
He spent time in Spain, became a short-lived local hero by buying the ailing La Liga team Racing Santander in 2010, before the team collapsed into bankruptcy once alarms started being sounded about WGA.
Marks were targeted mostly in New Zealand and Australia, typically businessmen down to their last few million and desperate for refinancing. Contracts were signed in Bahrain and Amsterdam before money was sent to Switzerland.
The multiple jurisdictions made it difficult for any single national authority to take responsibility for the case, van Leewarden said.
'That's the way that they operate, and generally they're going to get away with it unless there's a real overall focus on it,' he said.
He said the Serious Fraud Office was unable to provide any assistance.
After the balloon went up and complaints of fraud began circulating in the media and courtrooms, Syed retreated to Bahrain and spent more than six years contesting fraud claims pushed by van Leewarden that ended in disappointment.
Van Leewarden chooses his words carefully, talking about justice in the Gulf enclave: 'I had a number of briefings with the prosecutors in Bahrain. They didn't really have an appetite for the case, and they seemed anyway to arrive at a position whereby what had happened were just normal commercial transactions.'
Syed then fled to Turkey, becoming a citizen there and abandoning his Indian passport, before authorities in Ankara stripped him of citizenship in 2022 and he relocated once more to London.
It was then late 2022 and, arriving at London airport, Syed's luck finally ran out.
Arrested by English police on a 2013 Swiss warrant for fraud that demanded extradition, Syed spent two years behind bars in Britain before his appeals against being deported were exhausted.
In late 2024 he made his final journey to Switzerland where Swiss prosecutors and a New Zealand private investigator were waiting for him to finally face the music.
Matt Nippert is an Auckland-based investigations reporter covering white-collar and transnational crimes and the intersection of politics and business. In 2011 he broke the first story about Western Gulf Advisory being an apparent advance fee fraud. He has won more than a dozen awards for his journalism – including twice being named Reporter of the Year – and joined the Herald in 2014 after having spent the decade prior reporting from business newspapers and national magazines.
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NZ Herald
34 minutes ago
- NZ Herald
On The Up: Whangārei trust wants to offer supermarket alternative, cheaper butter
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NZ Herald
2 hours ago
- NZ Herald
Big projects abandoned, deferred, delayed, unbuilt: Dire state of Auckland CBD real estate
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An Eke Panuku spokeswoman said last week: 'No news as yet on North Wharf, but I will be in touch as soon as there's something to share.' Anne Gibson has been the Herald's property editor for 25 years, written books and covered property extensively here and overseas.


Otago Daily Times
15 hours ago
- Otago Daily Times
Unemployment to hit nine-year high
By Gyles Beckford of RNZ Unemployment is set to hit its highest level in nearly nine years, as the lagging effects of last year's recession and the sluggish recovery hit hiring and wages. Economists expect the rate to rise to 5.3%at the end of June - the highest since the end of 2016 - and up from 5.1% in the previous quarter, with jobs having been shed and hiring almost at a standstill. "We expect the unemployment rate to rise... as very modest growth in the labour force - labour supply - meets a small contraction in employment - labour demand," ANZ senior economist Miles Workman said. Economists have picked that the labour market was close to the bottom, but the lack of meaningful growth in the past quarter has cast doubt whether this might be the case. Workman suggested a degree of "labour hoarding" had suppressed unemployment as firms opted to hold on to staff in anticipation of an economic upturn. "If a recovery in economic momentum doesn't do the heavy lifting when it comes to 'right-sizing' firms' labour input, a further reduction in headcount may be needed." ASB senior economist Mark Smith said partial indicators since the last set of numbers had shown falling job advertisements, firms still shedding staff, little problem in finding staff except in specialised positions, and people quitting the workforce. "Earlier falls in hiring and more competition for jobs is expected to continue to deter some candidates from actively seeking work." No hiring, some firing Westpac senior economist Michael Gordon said chief among the casualties of the downturn and job losses have been young people. "As the economy cooled off, this group has found themselves out of work again or are struggling to get into work in the first place." The overall slide in immigration from post-Covid gains of more than 130,000 a year to a mere 15,000, and a subsequent exodus to Australia, are likely to be marginal influences for the labour market. However, cooling wage growth may be a more significant factor. Expectations are that private sector labour costs grew about 2.3% in the June quarter - a four-year low - as the weaker employment market shifted the bargaining advantage to employers from workers. That would mean wages falling behind rising inflation, but would also reduce wage pressures on domestic prices. "Wage inflation can be considered broadly consistent with CPI inflation around target, but given we're a decent clip from the labour market entering inflationary territory... it's fair to say that disinflation pressures stemming from the labour market are set to continue for a while yet," Workman said. Kiwibank economists said conditions were right for another Reserve Bank interest rate cut on August 20. "Downside risks to medium term inflation are growing given the soft labour market and dimming global outlook. "We expect the RBNZ to cut the cash rate by 25bps (basis points) at the August meeting. And they'll need to go to 2.5% eventually," they said in a commentary.