An Indian-origin business tycoon dubbed 'King Con' has been found guilty by a British court of fleecing wealthy investors of nearly $20 million.
Ketan Somaia, 52, a former Kenya resident who moved to the UK, was convicted on Friday by the Old Bailey Court of nine counts of obtaining money by deception, totaling $19.5 million, from two separate victims and acquitted of two counts of obtaining money by deception to the tune of $3.5 million.
Somaia presided over the collapse of an African bank and is best known for his involvement in the Goldenberg affair, a corruption scandal that helped wreck Kenya's economy.
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His lavish lifestyle was being paid for by people whose money was "taken and not given back", in a "systematic series of frauds," Boyce said.
In a single year, he was accused of extracting a total of of $23 million from an entrepreneur, Murli Mirchandani, after promising him stakes in his ventures.
Aside from some money for interest, Boyce claimed: "Not a penny of the $23 million capital advanced to Mr Somaia has ever been repaid."
Mirchandani, who made his fortune in food and chemicals, pursued Somaia for more than a decade and was the primary complainant in the successful Old Bailey trial.
The jury found that Somaia had also defrauded a London businessman, Dilip Shah, of $339,310.
Before meeting Mirchandani, Somaia was said to have fleeced a third man, Surajit Sen, for $2 million in 1997.
Somaia was said to have lured his victims by claiming that he had a personal fortune of $100 million and that his companies were worth $500 million, the report in the British daily said.
He laid on all-expenses-paid trips to Africa and Dubai, where the visitors, accompanied by hired musicians, traveled in chauffeur-driven cars and on a private jet and stayed at luxury hotels, it said.
Concluding the trial, Judge Richard Hone said: "This case has been exceptional for a number of reasons - the sums involved, the extraordinary lifestyles, the famous names, the world of international businessmen and the outpouring of $23 million simply relying on the concept of 'My word is my bond'."
Somaia is due to be sentenced this month after a medical report.