A 21-year-old woman who
was arrested at Sydney Airport trying to leave Australia allegedly spent
millions on handbags and luxury goods after $4.6 million was mistakenly
transferred into her bank account.
Christine Jiaxin Lee, a
Malaysian national, wrongly received the money after it was transferred into
her Westpac bank account as an overdraft four years ago.
The chemical engineering
student, who was attempting to leave to Malaysia when she was picked up by
Australian Federal Police at Sydney Airport on Wednesday night, still
allegedly owes $3.3 million to her bank.
She allegedly purchased 'luxury items' while taking advantage of the mistakenly extended overdraft.
According to Nines News, the young
woman allegedly spent $3.3 million in less than a year where she made purchases
on designer handbags and making cash transfers.
Ms Lee had been living
in a sub-penthouse apartment with Sydney Harbour Bridge views before her
arrest.
The apartment in Rhodes,
in Sydney's inner west, was rented at $780 a week or $3120 per month, according
to property records.
Lee appeared at Waverley
Local Court on Thursday after being charged with dishonestly obtaining
financial advantage by deception and knowingly dealing with the proceeds of
crime.
The young student was granted bail in court on condition that she report twice
daily to police in the Sydney suburb of Ryde, surrenders her emergency passport
and lives with her boyfriend Vincent King at his home, also in the suburb of
Rhodes.
But she will spend a
night in jail because her boyfriend - who tried to pay a $1000 bond for her
release - was only carrying a Malaysian ID card and officers could not verify
his identity, meaning they had to refuse her bail, The Daily Telegraph reported.
There was also a
misspelling on her bail address, which must be updated in front of a magistrate
before she can be released.
Lee will return to court
on Friday morning where she's expected to walk free after the hearing.
Earlier on Thursday, a Magistrate said of the money Lee had accessed from her bank account: 'She didn't take it from them - they gave it to her.'
The court heard that
although the police fraud unit had started their investigation into the
withdrawal of the money in 2012, they only issued the arrest warrant on March 4
this year.
The student told her
lawyer that she had obtained the emergency passport to fly home to Malaysia to
visit her parents, who did not know about her arrest.
Lee's lawyer, Fiona
McCarron told the court that the money was partly spent on luxury items like
expensive handbags, to which the Magistrate commented: 'That's a lot of
handbags.'
And Ms Stapleton agreed
with the lawyer when she said the police would struggle to prove the spending
of the money was illegal.
'They gave it to her,'
said the Magistrate, who added that if it was proved that the money was indeed
given to Lee, then the student would owe the money to the bank and have to pay
it back.
'But she wouldn't
necessarily have broken the law,' said the Magistrate.
Lee, who claimed to have obtained the emergency passport because she had lost her original one, will not be allowed to enter any international airport or port and has to report to police twice daily.
She is also not allowed
to apply for another passport.
Lee, who has lived in
Australia for five years, lives with her boyfriend at Rhodes in Sydney's
north-west.
The court was told she
had been in Australia for a year by the time the overdraft was wrongly put in
place.
She is three years
through a four-year chemical engineering degree but has deferred her final
year.
The woman is due to
appear at Downing Centre Local court on June 21.
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