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US Charges Three Malaysian State Telecoms Officials for Multimillion-Dollar Fraud

KUALA LUMPUR, May 20 (Reuters) – The United States has charged ⁠three ⁠senior employees of Telekom Malaysia (TM) ⁠for allegedly misappropriating over $20 million from the Malaysian state telecommunications firm, ​the U.S. Department of Justice said on Tuesday.

Mohd Hafiz Lockman, Mohd Yuzaimi Yusof, and Khanh Thuong Nguyen, who ‌were senior executives at the ‌U.S. subsidiary of TM, were accused of using false statements and forged records to siphon funds ⁠from the ⁠company and deceive counterparties, suppliers, auditors and supervisors in the United States ​on various occasions between July 2020 and February 2026, authorities said.

“These three individuals are alleged to have conducted a deliberate and calculated embezzlement scheme, falsifying corporate records for their own financial benefit,” FBI Assistant Director ​in Charge James C. Barnacle, Jr. said in a statement.

Mohd Hafiz was arrested at San ⁠Francisco ⁠airport, while the other two ⁠accused turned ​themselves in to authorities last month. The trio were charged with wire fraud conspiracy, wire ​fraud, and aggravated identity theft, ⁠the DOJ said.

Mohd Hafiz, Mohd Yuzaimi and Nguyen could not be immediately reached for comment. TM did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

The DOJ said it declined to file charges against TM itself, after the company self-reported the criminal conduct and pledged to cooperate with authorities.

Reuters reported ⁠in March that the department was rolling out a policy to encourage firms to ⁠report criminal misconduct in exchange for reduced penalties and other benefits.

The defendants were accused of diverting millions of dollars from TM into bank accounts they controlled, according to the U.S. indictment.

On one occasion, TM was asked to approve a sale of eight terabytes of capacity to a U.S. multinational for $54 million, when in fact only six terabytes were purchased.

The defendants then allegedly sold the excess capacity to other companies, diverting funds from the illicit sales through a sham entity, the DOJ said.

They were also accused ⁠of inflating the cost of cable purchases, redirecting nearly $2.9 million in payments to a bank account they controlled, and allegedly claimed reimbursements for fabricated work expenses, it said.

The three also allegedly impersonated employees and interns to capture their salaries, and on one ​occasion used an AI-assisted imposter to deceive human resources staff, the DOJ ​said.

(Reporting by Rozanna Latiff; Editing by David Stanway)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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