Jamaican sprinter Usain Bolt told reporters Friday that he is baffled over how $12.7 million of his money has gone missing from a local private investment firm that authorities are investigating as part of a massive fraud that began more than a decade ago.
Bolt also said he has fired his business manager, adding
that it was not an amicable split.
When asked if he was “broke,” the retired star athlete
laughed.
“I’m not broke, but it’s definitely put a damper on me,” he
said. “It was for my future. Everybody knows I have three kids. I’m still
looking out for my parents, and I still want to live very well.”
Bolt’s attorneys have said the athlete’s account with Kingston-based
Stocks and Securities Limited dwindled from nearly $12.8 million to some
$12,000. They had given the company until Friday to return the money or face
civil and criminal action.
It wasn’t immediately clear whether any action had been
taken as of late Friday. Attorney Linton P. Gordon did not return a message
seeking comment.
He told the Jamaica Observer newspaper that the public
should anticipate the “expected and the unexpected” in the case.
“There is nothing to say at this stage, given what is
happening,” he was quoted as saying. “We have met with persons, and we are
dealing with certain matters.”
Earlier this week, Jamaican Finance Minister Nigel Clarke
announced that the director of the Financial Services Commission was stepping
down and that the Bank of Jamaica would now be in charge of regulating the
island’s financial system.
He said several government agencies and elderly customers
also were affected by the alleged fraud.
“It’s always a sad situation. Definitely disappointed,” Bolt
said of the elderly who were affected. “Everybody’s confused. … I’m as confused
as the public.”
Jamaican authorities have requested help from the FBI and
other unidentified international experts, adding that clients were given false
statements regarding their balances as part of the alleged fraud. Officials
have not yet said how many clients overall were affected and how much money in
total is missing.
Earlier on Friday, Bolt spoke at a sponsored luncheon for an
upcoming relay and referred to the alleged fraud.
“As you all know. I’ve been going through a tough week, a
few tough weeks,” he said, adding that he would continue to do everything he
can to uplift his island.
“No matter what’s going on right now, Jamaica is my country.
That will never change,” he said.
In an aside with reporters, he said: “I’m just trying to
focus on my family and trying not to think too much about it because it’s a
difficult situation.”
Stocks and Securities Limited did not return a message
seeking comment Friday. The company contacted authorities earlier this month to
alert them that a manager had apparently committed fraud.
Earlier this week, Jamaican Prime Minister Andrew Holness
announced that his administration would not bail out the company.
“The government will not socialize any debt, and we will not
socialize the failure of our banks,” he said. -AP