Dozens of designer handbags stuffed with cash and jewellery were seized during Malaysian police raids on luxury properties linked to former prime minister Najib Razak on Friday, as a corruption probe gathered pace.
Officers removed Hermes, Birkin and Louis Vuitton bags as part of a trove whose value they said they could not yet estimate because of its sheer volume.
In the Taman Duta home of Najib, the police said they seized 52 luxury handbags. The handbags included 16 from Chanel, 10 from Gucci, eight from Versace and five from Oscar de la Renta, the Straits Times reported.
The operation also yielded a haul of ten luxury watches including several Rolexes, a Hublot and a Patek Philippe, as well as RM537,000 (S$181,000) and 2.87 million Sri Lankan rupees (S$24,400) in cash.
According to Straits Times, the haul was in addition to the 284 boxes containing luxury handbags and 72 bags filled with jewellery, cash of various denominations, watches and other valuables that were seized late on Thursday night after the police raided three apartments owned by Datuk Seri Najib’s family in Pavilion Residences, a posh condominium development in Kuala Lumpur’s shopping district.
At one of these apartments, the police took what was likely to be their biggest haul, loading five police trucks with hundreds of orange boxes containing Hermes Birkin bags. A Birkin costs anywhere between US$12,000 (S$16,105) and US$300,000.
The discovery adds significantly to the peril faced by Najib, who just last week had seemed to be cruising toward an election victory before a stunning upset.
The raids made good on a pledge by the new government headed by 92-year-old Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad to investigate Najib.
Officers had previously declined to comment on the searches.
But Amar Singh, head of the Malaysian police commercial crime investigation unit, on Friday confirmed the raids were linked to investigations into accusations that Najib, his family, and cronies looted billions from a state investment fund he founded.
“I can’t give an estimated value of the items,” Amar told reporters at the upscale Kuala Lumpur condo complex where the raids were carried out.
“We have sealed the bags but we know they contain money and we know they contain jewellery.”
He said 72 of the bags were filled with large amounts of “various currencies, including Malaysian ringgit, US dollars, watches and jewellery”.
“The amount of jewellery is rather big,” he said.
Footage captured by local media showed cardboard boxes and suitcases, sealed in plastic wrapping, being loaded into a black police truck. It took five trucks to remove all of the seized items, reports said.
Just last week, 64-year-old Najib was widely expected to lead his powerful Barisan Nasional (National Front) political machine to victory, extending a more than six-decade reign that had made it one of the world’s longest-serving governments.
But his coalition — accused of ballot-box stuffing and gerrymandering — was unexpectedly trounced by a diverse alliance that rallied public support against Najib’s suspected corruption and increasingly repressive tactics.
The handbag discovery will add to public scorn for Najib’s wife Rosmah Mansor, who has long been reviled by Malaysians for her perceived haughty demeanour and reported vast collection of designer bags, clothing and jewellery collected on jet-set overseas shopping trips.
Her reputation contributed to voter perceptions of rot in a ruling establishment that had lost touch with economically struggling and middle-class Malaysians.
Mahathir had already barred Najib from leaving the country in the wake of last week’s election over allegations that he oversaw the looting of billions of dollars from sovereign wealth fund 1MDB in a breathtaking and complex campaign of fraud and money-laundering stretching around the world.
The police actions have fuelled speculation in Malaysia that Najib would soon be taken into custody, but so far there has been no indication that his arrest was imminent.
Mahathir and Anwar Ibrahim, the former opposition leader who was jailed under Najib but freed on Wednesday, indicated this week that they expected charges to be filed against Najib soon.