Following the heist, the millions stolen from the Bangladesh central bank's American accounts on February 5 were immediately sent via electronic transfer to a Philippine bank.
The dollar accounts where the stolen funds landed were reportedly opened by two men, Sua Hua Gao from Beijing and a Macau associate identified only as Mr. Ding, in Manila's Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC) nine months before the theft.
"Two foreigners were responsible for bringing in the USD 81 million," casino operator Kim Wong said at a Senate hearing in Manila.
Wong said he did not know that the money was stolen from Bangladesh's foreign reserves, which were kept at the United States Federal Reserve in New York.
Wong and another Chinese casino junket operator, Weikang Xu, are under criminal investigation by Filipino prosecutors for their alleged role in laundering the proceeds of the heist.
Wong said he was told last month by the duo that "money was coming" to the five RCBC accounts.
RCBC has admitted the accounts through which the allegedly stolen money was deposited had been opened under fictitious names.
Wong's testimony appears to shed some light on the brazen caper that has forced Bangladesh Bank governor Atiur Rahman to resign and highlighted how the Philippines has become a money-laundering destination due to loose regulation of its casinos.
Philippine law exempts casino transactions from scrutiny by the country's anti-money laundering council without a case filed in court.
Wong described Sua as a "big junket operator" who was 450 million pesos (USD 9.7 million) in debt at Manila's Solaire, one of the Philippines' biggest casinos.
"He said he was selling property in China," Wong told the hearing.
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