Equanimity Owner Claims No Notice of Court Hearing Today to Expedite Sale

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A company linked to Jho Low, which claims ownership of the Equanimity, has alleged that it has received no legal notice on the sale of the superyacht.

  • Owner accuses government of violating due legal process by seeking to expedite a “fire sale”
  • Alleges that a quick sale would fetch just a “fraction of its true value”, burden potential buyers due to the question of its ownership
  • Claims that yacht is now docked in hazardous and polluted waters detrimental to its maintenance

In a statement issued just hours before the start of a hearing at the Kuala Lumpur Admiralty Court on a suit by 1Malaysia Development Berhad (1MDB) which is seeking to expedite the sale of the vessel, Equanimity (Cayman) Ltd said it had not received notice of the pending court hearing on the matter.

“For Malaysia to act unilaterally while there are pending court requests in the US would be an affront to the international rule of law,” the statement said.

The statement claimed that Malaysia’s intent to immediately sell the superyacht, which has reportedly been valued at about RM1 billion, would drastically reduce its potential sale value.

“Due to the Malaysian government’s precipitous, ill-conceived, and misguided actions, the yacht is running 24 hours per day, seven days a week on generator power, which is unsustainable and harmful to the vessel.

“Moreover, Malaysia has currently docked the yacht in a hazardous environment in which toxins such as water pollution and nearby smoke are greatly damaging it.”

The statement claimed that since Malaysia apparently does not have – or does not want to spend – the necessary funds to properly maintain the vessel while it is prepared for a value-maximising sale, “Malaysia has instead proposed a ‘fire sale’, in which the yacht is to be sold for a fraction of its true value.”

“To move for a sale in Malaysia immediately would be a remarkable violation of due process and international legal comity, and would call into question the actual ownership of the yacht for any potential buyer,” the statement added.

It said such actions would create a cloud on the Equanimity’s ownership that could easily take years to resolve in several courts around the world.

Today, the court will hear the application for the disposal of the 300-foot, multi-storey Equanimity, a move, if successful, will mark the first effort by Malaysia to recover the billions diverted from the troubled 1MDB.

1MDB and its two subsidiaries, 1MDB Energy Holdings Limited and 1MDB Global Investment Limited, as well as the government of Malaysia, have named the owner of the ship Equanimity of Cayman Islands as the sole defendant in the suit.

It was filed by the law firm of Jeremy Joseph and partners on Thursday (Aug 23)

On Aug 6, a writ of summons was issued to the owner of the vessel as well as to Wilson Yacht Management Ltd, the company that operates the Equanimity.