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Chinese exile Guo Wengui files for bankruptcy after yacht dispute

  • Businessman was last week told to pay US$134 million fine or face arrest for violating court order to keep his vessel in American waters
  • The luxury yacht, called the Lady May, made the news in 2020 when Trump strategist Steve Bannon was arrested on board

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Chinese businessman Guo Wengui holds a news conference with Steve Bannon (not pictured) in New York in November 2018. Photo: Reuters
The billionaire Chinese fugitive Guo Wengui declared bankruptcy this week, claiming in a court filing that his net worth had dried up to less than US$100,000 while owing hundreds of millions of dollars to dozens of creditors.
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It came after a state judge last week ordered Guo to pay a fine of US$134 million or face arrest, because he had violated a court order to keep his luxury yacht in American waters as part of a dispute over debts that he owed.

The bankruptcy filing is the latest turn in the long-running saga of Guo, who fled China in 2014 and became an ardent supporter of former president Donald Trump and strident critic of the Chinese Communist Party.
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Guo, who filed for bankruptcy in the state of Connecticut under the name Ho Wen Kwok, appealed the judge’s order last week to forfeit the US$135 million, and claimed that he does not own the yacht, according to Bloomberg.

His lawyer in the bankruptcy case, William Baldega, could not immediately be reached for comment.

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