BEIJING — Escalating
efforts to repatriate one of the ruling Communist Party’s most wanted exiles,
Chinese police have opened an investigation on a new allegation, rape, against
New York-based billionaire Guo Wengui, who has been releasing what he calls
official secrets ahead of a pivotal party leadership conference.
Two Chinese officials with direct knowledge of the investigation told The Associated Press that police are requesting a second Interpol arrest notice for Guo, 50, for the alleged sexual assault of a 28-year-old former personal assistant.
Two Chinese officials with direct knowledge of the investigation told The Associated Press that police are requesting a second Interpol arrest notice for Guo, 50, for the alleged sexual assault of a 28-year-old former personal assistant.
Guo and his representatives did not respond to repeated
requests for comment.
The rape allegation represents a new element in the
sprawling case that Chinese prosecutors are building against the real estate
tycoon, who is being investigated for at least 19 major criminal cases.
Allegations against him include bribing a top Chinese intelligence official,
kidnapping, fraud and money laundering.
The Associated Press reviewed documents related to the rape
investigation and confirmed their contents with Chinese official sources in
Beijing, who requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing case. The Chinese
officials’ disclosures to the AP — an unusual move given the political
sensitivity of Guo’s case in China — underscores Beijing’s urgent effort to not
only bring a fugitive to heel on criminal charges but also silence a potent
irritant in the run-up to a key Communist Party congress during which political
stability and the stifling of any challenges to the party head, President Xi
Jinping, are paramount.
Although the United States does not have an extradition
agreement with China, Beijing hopes that a mounting body of evidence could sway
the U.S. government against extending the exiled businessman’s visa, which is
believed to expire in October, the Chinese officials said.
Senior U.S. and Chinese officials have discussed the
allegations against Guo, according to a third person with direct knowledge of
the talks. The Chinese officials are asking the U.S. to cancel Guo’s visa,
according to the person, who spoke on condition of anonymity because they
weren’t authorized to disclose the discussions.
It’s unclear what steps Washington plans to take, if any.
The White House would not comment on the matter.
The Guo saga highlights how China’s efforts to repatriate
elite Chinese seeking refuge on American soil have become increasingly
contentious in the bilateral relationship. The U.S. government has often
refused Beijing’s demands to extradite corruption suspects, citing flimsy
evidence and China’s opaque justice system. But the U.S. has sent back two
Chinese fugitives in the past three months, including one suspected of rape.
In recent months, Guo has become a widely followed — and, in
the eyes of China’s leadership, highly destabilizing — social media presence by
serving up sensational, if mostly unverifiable, tales of corruption and scandal
within the Communist Party’s innermost sanctum, including among Xi’s closest
allies.
In a daily stream of Twitter posts and YouTube videos
tracked by Chinese who follow political gossip, Guo has revealed what he claims
are everything from top leaders’ secret homes in California to their bank
account information and hidden stakes in business empires. He has vowed to
continue airing the party’s secrets until China unfreezes his assets and
releases his relatives who have been seized by authorities, he says, as
leverage against him.
Pressure on Guo has been building since April when Interpol
issued a “red notice” seeking his arrest on corruption-related charges. Chinese
authorities later sentenced several of his employees for fraud in June.
Police in central China opened the rape investigation July 5
after a former employee came forward, the officials said.
In interviews with police, the woman described how she was plucked
from her human resources position at Guo’s real estate company in Hong Kong in
2015 and sent overseas to become his personal assistant. The woman, whose
identity is being withheld by the AP, said that over the next two years, she
was raped several times in New York, London and the Bahamas by Guo, who she
said demanded sex from female employees as a test of their loyalty.
At times, she said, she languished in virtual detention
after Guo’s staff confiscated her smartphone, computer, passport and keys and
forbade her from leaving her room in his luxury apartment in the high-end
London neighborhood of Belgravia. To prove her case, the woman surreptitiously
met a lawyer friend in London earlier this year to give a written statement
about her ordeal and kept her underwear, pregnancy tests and abortion pills as
evidence, according to police documents.
In a brief phone interview with the AP arranged by Chinese
officials, the woman confirmed the account and described fleeing Guo’s
apartment to the Chinese Embassy in London in April to apply for a new passport
before returning to China. She said she was speaking of her own volition and
that police had assured her she could bring charges against Guo without facing
repercussions for having worked for a highly sought-after fugitive.
“I just want him to face justice for what he did to me,” she
said.
Calls to Guo’s mobile phone since Tuesday evening in New
York rang unanswered. Guo also did not respond to multiple requests for comment
sent by an AP reporter to his WhatsApp mobile messaging account since Tuesday.
Lawyers representing him at the New York firm Boies Schiller Flexner did not respond
to requests for comment.
In April, Guo told AP he believed the Interpol notice issued
at the time amounted to “state intimidation” and that China had submitted bogus
documents to the international police organization.
Interpol declined to comment about the latest warrant China
is seeking for Guo’s arrest, referring questions to national authorities as is
the policy in ongoing investigations.
Born into poverty in central China, Guo transformed himself
from a humble gasoline speculator into a real estate mogul who jet-setted with
the likes of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair. Key to his spectacular
rise, according to investigative profiles in Chinese media, was an ability to
befriend officials in China’s powerful security apparatus who helped him
intimidate business rivals, secure deals and gain insights into the secret
lives of the Chinese elite.
In one instance, according to these reports, Guo won the
rights to build the iconic Pangu tower in 2006 as part of Beijing’s Olympics
development project by working with Ma Jian, who later became China’s chief of
counterintelligence, to obtain a sex tape of a Beijing vice mayor who had
blocked Guo’s initial bid.
In 2015, anti-corruption investigators detained Ma and later
accused him of accepting $8.8 million in bribes from Guo, who fled the country.
Prior to that, Guo had enjoyed a mutually beneficial relationship with China’s
intelligence service, even helping to repatriate overseas fugitives, he later
said in his YouTube videos.
Guo in 2015 hired American private investigators to fan out
across the U.S. to look for Ling Wancheng, the fugitive brother of a disgraced
top aide to a former Chinese president who possibly sought to defect, a person
involved in that search effort told the AP. The person was legally barred from
discussing the case publicly and spoke on condition of anonymity.
Months later, Chinese agents arrived in the U.S. to search
for Ling in a covert operation that angered U.S. officials, underscoring how
the issue of politically connected Chinese fleeing to the U.S. has strained
relations.
“With political cases such as Ling Wancheng and Guo Wengui,
the U.S. seems reluctant to send them back because both have valuable
classified information about the top echelons of the party,” said Willy Lam, an
expert on Chinese politics at Chinese University of Hong Kong. “This phenomenon
is a big plus for the CIA and FBI.”
Lam said that although it is unlikely that Washington would
send Guo back given his intelligence value, President Donald Trump “could
potentially play the ‘fugitive card’ to put pressure on Beijing to make
concessions on issues ranging from trade to North Korea.”
The prospect of becoming a bargaining chip has worried Guo,
according to a leaked audio recording of a meeting he held earlier this year
with former U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security Jeh Johnson, who offered to
lobby the Trump administration for a visa extension.
A spokeswoman for Paul, Weiss, Rifkind, Wharton &
Garrison, the law firm where Johnson is partner, said a meeting between Guo and
Johnson “several months ago about a possible representation appears to have
been recorded and released,” but the firm ultimately did not take on Guo as a
client.
“I want to help you,” Johnson says in the edited recording
that recently surfaced online. “I am the only member of Barack Obama’s Cabinet
that has met with Donald Trump.”
In the recording, Johnson suggests Guo meet with FBI agents
and consider donating to human rights organizations to strengthen his case to
remain in the U.S. After Guo expresses concern that Trump had already “made a
deal” with the Chinese, Johnson and an unidentified woman who appears to be a
Guo adviser quickly assure him that Trump would not give him up.
“He would be violating your rights,” Johnson says, while the
adviser points out that Guo, who goes by the name Miles Kwok, should also
consider his membership in a Trump resort in Florida as a factor working in his
favor.
“Miles is a member of Mar-a-Lago,” she says, before Guo
bursts into laughter.
AP writers Lori Hinnant in Paris and Julie Pace in Washington
contributed to this report.