By Roy Denish
A fake doctorate, 105 shell companies, and $700 million routed overseas—investigators say a sophisticated money-laundering network exploited trade loopholes, vulnerable proxies, and global banking corridors stretching from Sri Lanka to Africa and the Gulf.
International Money-Laundering Probe Expands
Law enforcement authorities are expanding a massive international money-laundering investigation into West Africa and the Gulf region following the arrest of a prominent corporate executive accused of using a fake doctorate to anchor an illegal $700 million capital-flight network.
Executive Arrested in Negombo
Dr. Jeffrey Mohamed, a director of the Colombo Fort-based firm A.Y. Investment Ltd., was apprehended by the country’s Financial Crimes Investigation Division on June 19 after hiding at a residential complex in Negombo, police sources said.
Investigators claim the cross-border financial racket systematically funnelled foreign exchange out of the financially fragile island nation since 2023 under the guise of paying for fictional trade imports.
The case has exposed systemic vulnerabilities in South Asia’s banking architecture, highlighting how standard international trade settlement mechanisms can be weaponised to bypass state oversight and drain central bank reserves during a sensitive period of national economic recovery.
Fake Doctorate Allegedly Used to Build Credibility
Central to the operation was Mohamed’s carefully cultivated professional profile.
Though he styled himself as an elite “corporate doctor” and financial strategist specialising in boutique investment banking, asset swaps and Sharia-compliant corporate restructuring frameworks, investigators have revealed that his academic doctorate is entirely fraudulent.
An FCID source told media outlets on condition of anonymity that the suspect fabricated his doctoral credentials to gain entry into elite institutional circles and secure the trust of foreign institutional investors.
Investigators allege that he effectively weaponised this elite persona to deflect compliance scrutiny while building a parallel financial ecosystem designed to appear completely legitimate.
A.Y. Investment Positioned as Gulf–Asia Bridge
According to corporate registries, A.Y. Investment was fundamentally designed as a strategic corporate bridge between South Asia and the Gulf Cooperation Council corridor.
The company was established to finance and advise on commercial joint ventures inside Saudi Arabia and Malaysia.
Over a multi-year period, Mohamed leveraged this axis to pitch trade infrastructure and joint-venture frameworks between Middle Eastern capital allocators and Asian trading partners.
West African Links Uncovered
However, the latest intelligence from the multi-agency task force has uncovered a parallel operational axis tracking extensive financial linkages to West African commercial hubs, primarily Nigeria.
An official close to the central bank audit noted that the inclusion of West African banking endpoints indicates a highly adaptive layering strategy.
The official explained that when traditional compliance tightened within the GCC corridor, the network diverted transaction volumes through West African intermediaries.
It allegedly utilised digital wallet structures and peer-to-peer cryptocurrency networks where physical bills of lading are less stringently enforced.
Vulnerable Proxies Allegedly Exploited
According to statements made in the Sri Lankan Parliament by Public Security Minister Ananda Wijepala, Mohamed allegedly leveraged his sophisticated understanding of international banking channels to execute a highly synchronised fraud structure.
The operation reportedly began with the exploitation of vulnerable proxies.
The network utilised bank accounts opened in the names of 36 low-income or low-literacy individuals to mask the true originators of the cash.
Network of 105 Front Companies Created
From there, a network of 105 local front companies was fraudulently registered through a complex web using the names of 55 specific individuals.
These entities operated primarily as prominent wholesale traders based in the Colombo Fort and Pettah business districts.
They approached domestic commercial banks to execute telegraphic transfers to offshore accounts under the claim that the funds were direct payments to overseas suppliers for high-value commodities, primarily gold and sanitary equipment.
No Cargo or Valid Customs Records Found
A severe systemic collapse occurred at the border, as Sri Lanka Customs verified that despite hundreds of millions of dollars being transferred out of the country, none of the 105 companies ever landed physical cargo or logged a valid customs manifest.
This mechanism allowed local commercial funds to bypass mandatory state tariffs, corporate taxes and central bank foreign exchange restrictions.
Mohamed allegedly collected an illicit personal commission of two Sri Lankan rupees for every US dollar successfully routed through the corridor.
Tax Evaders and Narcotics Syndicates Allegedly Used Network
The network functioned as a highly sought-after laundering hub for two major customer bases.
The first consisted of local tax-evading wholesalers seeking to bypass central bank regulations.
The second allegedly involved transnational narcotics syndicates operating between West African hubs and South Asia, seeking to convert rupee-denominated street profits into foreign currency.
Authorities Freeze 227 Corporate Accounts
The scale of the operation has forced a massive multi-agency response involving the FCID, Sri Lanka Customs and the Financial Intelligence Unit.
Investigators are currently auditing and freezing 227 corporate bank accounts spread across 13 licensed domestic commercial banks.
Separate Rs.13 Billion Fraud Under Scrutiny
A parallel line of inquiry is probing whether a separate Rs.13 billion financial fraud at a local private bank was funnelled through the same shell-company structures.
Authorities are also investigating the potential complicity of internal banking compliance officials who cleared the high-volume, high-frequency transactions.
Seven-Day Detention Order Issued
The Colombo Chief Magistrate’s Court has placed Mohamed under an active seven-day detention warrant to facilitate interrogation.
Under Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Money Laundering Act, the State is moving to trace global assets and enforce structural forfeitures.
The specific identities of the 105 companies involved remain under judicial seal to prevent the premature destruction of digital banking logs or the flight of associated directors.
