Hairdresser-turned-football tycoon, Birmingham City owner Carson Yeung leaves the Wanchai district court in Hong Kong on October 28, 2013. Yeung has insisted he amassed his fortune through legitimate means, including high-end hair salons, as he testified in his 93 million USD money-laundering trial in Hong Kong.  AFP PHOTO / ALEX OGLE

 

Birmingham City’s Carson Yeung could face 14 years in jail if found guilty of money laundering charges/AFP pic.

HONG KONG businessman and Birmingham City owner Carson Yeung faces up to 14 years in jail if found guilty at the close of his multi-million dollar money-laundering trial on Friday.

For over two years the case has been in the courts, with the 53-year-old denying five charges totalling $93 million and repeatedly trying to have the proceedings halted, claiming irregularities.

Yeung was arrested and charged with ill-gotten gains in the southern Chinese city in June 2011, throwing the legitimacy of his rags-to-riches rise from hairdresser to top-flight English football club proprietor into doubt.

The prosecution claims around HK$720 million ($93 million) passed through bank accounts connected to Yeung between 2001 and 2007.

Under Hong Kong law, anyone found guilty of money laundering can be sentenced to up to 14 years in prison.

Yeung, who acquired the “Blues” in 2009, pleaded not guilty to all the charges in April last year. He has maintained his innocence from the start and has tried to have the case postponed at least twice.

Throughout the trial, Yeung and the prosecution have painted differing pictures of how the businessman’s wealth was amassed.

Yeung said he accumulated hundreds of millions of dollars through stock trading, hairdressing, business ventures in mainland China and a keen interest in gambling.

He said he made HK$20 million as a hairdresser between 1989 to 1994, when he ran five upmarket hair salons in hotels, including Hong Kong’s five-star Peninsula Hotel.

Yeung described himself as a “very famous” hairdresser, claiming his salons catered to movie stars and businessmen.

He also said he spent “all” of his time trading stocks after the 1998 Asian stock market crash, accumulating a stock portfolio of around HK$300 million by 2007.

Yeung told the court he made up to HK$30 million from gambling in Macau between 2004 and 2008, adding that he gambled as if he were “running a business”.

 

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