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Emry’s owner admits laundering $5.7 million earned from offering bogus jobs

15 January 2024

By Daisy CL Mandap

 

Ylagan outside the District Court following an earlier hearing of her case(File)

After more than seven years of insisting on her innocence, the co-owner of the defunct Emry’s employment agency finally pleaded guilty today, Jan 15, to four charges of laundering a total of $5.7 million which she made from offering non-existent jobs in Canada and the United Kingdom to some 500 Filipinos, mostly migrant workers.

Ester Ylagan, 71, who was described by her own lawyer as “extraordinarily naïve and gullible,” appeared on the dock for the first time since charges were filed against her in June 2018, and was ordered remanded in custody until her sentencing on Feb. 2.

In court to listen to her plea were about a dozen Filipino domestic workers whom Ylagan had duped into paying between $10,000 and $15,000 for the bogus jobs in the first half of 2016. They had been told by the police about the hearing, and that Ylagan had agreed to plead guilty.

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The offence of money laundering, or “dealing with property known or believed to represent proceeds of an indictable offence”, carries with it a maximum jail term of 14 years, and a fine of up to $5 million.

Ylagan had earlier insisted that she was innocent of the charge, claiming that she was a victim herself of an online scammer she named as “William Clinton”, who convinced her to recruit applicants for the bogus jobs, and to whom she had remitted all the money she made from the victims.

Her counsel, Michael Delaney, told Deputy District Judge Katherine Lo that it took awhile for Ylagan to understand that the offence of money laundering requires not just knowledge, but also “reasonable ground to believe” that she was dealing with proceeds of a crime.

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“It’s not just what the defendant believed but what a reasonable, objective, person should have known,” said Delaney.

He also said there was a “substantial volume of evidence” that showed Ylagan should have known that she was being scammed, like the fact that she was being asked to send money by a person she had never seen nor spoken to, to such places as Burkina Faso, Nigeria and Turkey.

The person who introduced himself to Ylagan as a recruitment agent in the United Kingdom, also asked that the money be sent to someone called Joshue Ikechukwa or Rocky Sanchez, when his name was supposed to be William Clinton.

It even got to a point where Ylagan’s staff who were being asked to do the transactions began getting  scared, especially when by the end of  April 2016, the remittance companies started rejecting their remittance requests.

All the while, Ylagan and the man who called himself Clinton were said to be in “constant, daily and repeated communication” online, said Delaney, adding that he had never seen anything like it.

He said Clinton would be kind and gentle one time, then harsh, “almost borderline cruel” the next time, and was constantly putting pressure on her. 

Delaney said the person Ylagan was communicating with was an obvious scammer and fraudster, but she never saw him like this at the time. “The defendant just followed whatever he said,” said the lawyer.

To make matters worse, Delaney said Ylagan was also defrauded by a barrister who convinced her to sell her Hong Kong flat ostensibly so she could refund the payments made by the job applicants, but then proceeded to pocket the proceeds.

(In an earlier statement she made to the police, Ylagan identified the barrister as Ody Lai, who at the time of their consultation in November 2016, had already been suspended by the Barristers Disciplinary Tribunal from practising in Hong Kong for four years, and to pay a penalty of $200,000 plus costs, for 10 counts of malpractice).

Delaney said that 12 months after Ylagan filed her complaint with the police,  the barrister was arrested, although no further action had been made since. However, Ylagan is said to have applied for legal aid to pursue her claim against Lai.

The ad posted outside Emry;s office in WorldWide Plaza in 2016

According to the summary of facts read out by the prosecution, Ylagan was part owner of Emry’s which was founded in 1992. She later set up Mike’s Secretarial Services in 2013 and she operated  it as a sole proprietorship.

From December 2015  to May 2016 Ylagan advertised in a Filipino community newspaper (not The SUN) regarding job offers in Canada and the UK, and also posted information about this on her shop in WorldWide Plaza.

During regular orientations she conducted for the applicants, she said those who wanted to apply for jobs in Canada should pay $15,000 while those who wanted to work in the UK should pay $10,000. The fees are supposed to be for the FICC (or Foreign Immigrant Clearance Certificate” and  FCC (“Foreign Employment Certificate”) and are non-refundable.

In fact, said the prosecutor, the FCC or FICC is not needed before one can take up a job in either of the two offered destinations.

Ylagan promised the jobseekers that they would be paid no less that 2,000 pounds a month, tax free, and given free accommodation. After working for two years, they would be given three months’ vacation with pay. She also promised that they could leave in three months on a chartered plane to London, accompanied by Hong Kong immigration officers.

According to the prosecution, more than 500 Filipino domestic workers were lured by these promises, , paying Ylagan a total of more than $6 million.  Between January and June 2016, part of this sum was remitted to overseas channels.

'What about us?,' asked some of the copmplainants who attended court along with 
Ester Bangcawayan from the Mission for Migrant Workers 

In the first charge, Ylagan is accused of sending to Malaysia, Nigeria and Burkina Faso  between Jan 29 and May 5, 2016, a total of of HK$2,633,181.52 and US$44,658 (HK$347,439). The total sum of HK$2,980,620 was dealt with in cash.

In the second count which happened between May 12 to 23, 2016, the total sum of USD300,00 (HK2,334,000) was moved by Ylagan from an account with Standard Chartered Bank to a recipient in Turkey.

In the third count, Ylagan, using an account she held at HSBC, again sent to Turkey a total of US$10,055 (HK$78,227) between May 25 and 26, 2016.

She last sent a total sum of US$50,000 (HK$389,000) from her HSBC account on Jul 8, 2016, again to Turkey.

In mitigation, Delaney said Ylagan first came to Hong Kong to work as a domestic helper in 1984. She had gone to college but did not finish her course. At the time she was married with three children in the Philippines.

She later divorced her first husband and married again, this time to Rick Ylagan, who founded Emry’s in 1992. They had one son, Michael.

Ylagan has maintained a clear record for the past 40 years that she has been in Hong Kong. She is in good health though she has take medication for stress-induced heart palpitation.

Following her arrest she had worked as an assistant cook, but is currently unemployed, and depends on government support for her daily needs.

Delaney submitted that Ylagan “was not a willing participant in the scam,” made no financial gain from the transactions, and was extremely remorseful.

Delaney added that Ylagan received only about $4 million from her job applicants, and the rest of what she had sent to the scammer was her own money. But when Judge Lo asked if there was proof of this, Delaney said there was none.

The judge then asked Delaney if Ylagan had repaid some of the claimants, and he replied that only a handful got back their money. Judge Lo instructed him to submit proof within the next three days to show how much money had been repaid so this could be taken into consideration when sentencing. 

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