Vietnam jails former CEO of gold producer SJC over bullion graft

By AFP   September 30, 2025 | 07:14 pm PT
Vietnam jails former CEO of gold producer SJC over bullion graft
SJC's former CEO Le Thuy Hang at a court in Ho Chi Minh City, Sept. 30, 2025. Photo by VnExpress/Quynh Tran
A court in Vietnam sentenced on Tuesday 16 people at its only state-sanctioned producer of gold bars to lengthy prison terms in a corruption case involving millions of dollars and hundreds of kilograms of bullion, state media reported.

State-owned Saigon Jewelry Company (SJC) has maintained a monopoly on gold bullion production in Vietnam since 2012.

But the State Bank of Vietnam announced in August that it will allow qualified commercial banks and enterprises to churn out gold bars starting Oct. 10, replacing the former state-exclusive mechanism.

The court ruled on Tuesday that SJC's former CEO, Le Thuy Hang, had pocketed $2.7 million and caused a loss of $4 million to state coffers and SJC "through a series of fraudulent schemes," according to state media.

At the end of a five-day trial in Ho Chi Minh City, Hang was sentenced to prison for 25 years for property embezzlement and abuse of power, the report said.

Her 15 accomplices -- all SJC staff -- were given prison terms ranging from two years, suspended, to more than 22 years on the same charges.

Between 2021 and 2024, Hang directed her subordinates to inflate the loss rate when processing 10 tonnes of SJC-branded gold bars, appropriating nearly 3.6 kilograms of gold.

They falsified documents to legalize the surplus gold and sold it for personal gain, according to the report.

The court also said that while handling dented gold bars assigned by the central bank to process, Hang had around 235 kilograms of SJC gold bars and tens of thousands of gold rings illegally manufactured and sold for profit.

Hang also ordered her staff to create a fake customer list to smuggle out about 34 kilograms of gold.

The defendants were ordered to pay back a total of about 640 kilograms of gold to the state, the court ruled.

Families and businesses in Vietnam have long relied on the precious metal as a store of value and personal savings.

 
 
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