Business

Gary Cohn giving to charity to resolve Goldman 1MDB impasse

Bank lauds ex-president’s move

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 11 Dec 2020 8:20AM

Gary Cohn giving to charity to resolve Goldman 1MDB impasse
Former Goldman Sachs president Gary Cohn will donate to charity rather than return past earnings that the company sought to reclaim after the 1MDB Malaysian bribery scandal. – The Vibes file pic, December 11, 2020

NEW YORK – Former Goldman Sachs president Gary Cohn will donate to charity rather than return past earnings that the company sought to reclaim after the 1MDB Malaysian bribery scandal, Goldman said yesterday.

The investment bank in October announced a plan to claw back compensation from former and current bank executives following a US$2.9 billion (RM11.7 billion) criminal settlement with the Justice Department over the massive international scandal.

The bank said it was seeking some US$174 million from a group of current and former bank leaders because of their role in “institutional failure” at Goldman, even though the executives were not involved in “any illicit activity”, the bank said in October.

But Cohn, who served as a White House economic adviser in the first two years of the Trump administration after leaving Goldman, resisted returning the funds. 

When Cohn moved into government, his deferred compensation was cashed out, severing him completely from Goldman.

Bloomberg News reported yesterday that Goldman had sought more than US$10 million in back compensation from Cohn, but it was not clear if he planned to donate that entire sum.

The report said he was giving money to charities that work in pandemic relief and social justice.

A Cohn spokesman confirmed the move, saying “Mr Cohn is a team player, and as a good corporate citizen, he volunteered many weeks ago to make a significant charitable contribution to Goldman Sachs-sponsored organisations and looks forward to doing so.”

Goldman applauded the move.

“We are pleased that Gary has chosen to support charitable organizations that are doing important work and put this matter behind us,” a Goldman spokesman said. – AFP, December 11, 2020

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