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Michigan man sought in failed investments

DETROIT, Nov. 26 (UPI) -- A Michigan businessman indicted for his role in a $26 million loan scandal is linked to more than $100 million in failed business deals in Qatar, officials say.

Abdulla al-Jufairi, 47, left the Detroit area in 2006 before a federal grand jury indicted him for defrauding the government for millions of dollars in loans for gas stations, The Detroit News reported Monday.

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He was among five men accused of arranging three bad loans from the Small Business Administration, allegedly by faking invoices and supplying faulty documents to inflate the value of the stations.

A loan officer, Patrick Harrington, is serving 10 years in prison for his role in the deals with al-Jufairi and dozens of other bad loans.

After leaving the United States, al-Jufairi became involved with a proposed office tower and a development on a man-made island in Qatar.

A Caribbean-based investment company sued him this year in London to recover $30 million it invested with him in the office tower project. A British court in May ordered al-Jufairi to pay the company $42 million.

A British investment house is seeking $75 million from him for failed loans in the island development project, while a Kuwaiti investment company claims al-Jufairi owes it $40 million from another project in Qatar.

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