On Wednesday, the Journal had reported that officials were probing the private offering to raise funds for GTV Media Group. Bannon is listed as GTV’s director and Guo as its adviser and fundraiser in a company fundraising document the Journal viewed. Guo, a wanted fugitive in China, has been accused of bribery, fraud and money laundering, all of which he has denied.
Investigators are examining whether GTV Media or associates of Guo violated securities laws, according to the Journal’s sources. Soon after the investment offering, people began demanding refunds, saying they never received documentation verifying their investments, the newspaper reported. JPMorgan Chase and Wells Fargo have already frozen accounts tied to the money raised in the operation, sources said.
The British Columbia Securities Commission issued an “investment caution” in May after Canadians purchased shares of GTV Media Group Inc. It warned that company officials “ in BC and have not filed a prospectus with the British Columbia Securities Commission.” The alert added: “We urge BC residents to exercise caution when dealing with companies that are not registered to issue shares.”A fundraising document reviewed by the Journal said GTV would be a platform for news, social media and e-commerce, and would serve as the “only uncensored and independent bridge between China and the Western world.
The document named Amazon, ByteDance’s TikTok and Tencent’s WeChat as expected competitors. Early this month, Trump ordered the latter two companies, both Chinese, to finalize deals to sell to U.S. companies in 90 days or to