If Bryan is truly guilty of something substantial, it is that he was/is an utter failure as a leader; and he has let his wife down and put her into harm's way the same way he did to his most faithful employees at Picpay. People forget that BNM's investigation is for money laundering. Back in July of last year, when I discovered a group of my accounts had been hijacked by muslim stereo-typical sounding names like Achmed, Mustafa, and so on, it was only two distinct faithful Picpay employees that worked marvelously, and under great pressure, to regain my accounts from the criminals. Those two, through many hours of going back and forth, informed me of an extremely dismal situation at Pips and Picpay. Bryan was always absent in mind if not body and left the worker environment on their own to be infiltrated by a criminal element who were attempting to hijack Pips member's account, as in about six of mine. They felt betrayed by Bryan and worked silently and even off-work to fix my accounts without making a stir. They communicated with me via personal email and we finally got it straightened out. Any of the other employees that--i.e., those that were not them--were in on the game and kept telling me that I need to furnish mountains worth of proof those were my accounts, which I did because I have everything copied from the very beginning of the goldenwomb days...every little detail. That didn't matter to them, as it turned out, because they were part of the criminal element. It was only when I kept requesting certain employees that I eventually connected with them solidly and they walked me through the extremely hard situation they were in and helped me reclaim my accounts. That's when I discovered all the utter failure of the man Bryan as a CEO and leader. The BMN is walking on feathers with this case because I know they don't even want the full disclosure of what more than likely truly does amount to an organized and orchestrated money laundering attempt. Implications could be money was trying to be siphoned off to fund militant muslim activities, the discovery of which could be an embarrassment to the Malaysian government. Bryan may have been good in congeniality, but that doesn't equate with good business morals, strength and leadership needed to successfully run an operation with the monetary potential that pipsinc had. At any rate, again, the investigation was spurred to take place over allegations of money laundering, and I think, with respect to Bryan and BMN, that is important to keep that in mind. It'll be interesting to see how BNM finally handles this situation, implications and all.
Regards,
thelema