As much as USD 34 million remained in two casinos and a foreign exchange brokerage, senator Ralph Recto said, citing testimonies from a marathon hearing on Tuesday.
"Our law enforcement agencies must act swiftly to recover any portion of the loot that is still within Philippine soil," Recto said in a statement.
"It is very important to recover as much of the money and return it to Bangladesh. The money was stolen from a poor country," he added.
The brazen heist highlighted how the Philippine's banking loopholes and anti-money laundering laws have made the impoverished and corruption-weary Southeast Asian nation a dirty money destination.
Philippine law exempts casino transactions from scrutiny by the country's anti-money laundering council without a case filed in court.
A casino junket operator, Kim Wong, testified in the Senate on Tuesday that two high-rollers from Beijing and Macau shifted the USD 81 million to dollar accounts in Manila's Rizal Commercial Banking Corp (RCBC).
He offered to return USD 4.3 million of the money, which he said remained in his account in Solaire, one of the Philippine capital's gleaming billion-dollar casinos.
But by Recto's own calculations, far more can be recovered including USD 17 million that Wong claimed was still with exchange brokerage Philrem, USD 10 million from a destitute casino in the north, USD 5.5 million that Wong picked up from the house of Philrem's owner and a further USD 2.3 million in the Solaire casino account of the Macau man who allegedly brought the USD 81 million to the Philippines.
