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Marina Bay City, Lombok: Did a Police Complaint Become a Weapon in a Corporate Dispute?

Marina Bay City, Lombok: Did a Police Complaint Become a Weapon in a Corporate Dispute?
Serious questions are now being raised around Marina Bay City in Lombok, Indonesia, and KINARA (K-I-N-N-A-R-A), the Asian real estate platform formerly involved in the project, following claims of threats, contradictory public statements, and an alleged attempt to involve law enforcement after a completed buyout.
At the centre of the controversy is Adrian Campbell, CEO of KINARA, and a formal police complaint that critics say appears to conflict with earlier media releases and documented communications.
Alleged Threats Prior to the Buyout
According to WhatsApp messages seen by multiple parties close to the Marina Bay City project, Adrian Campbell allegedly threatened that if KINARA did not receive a multi-million-dollar bailout payment, he would take steps to have the founder of Lux — the company that later assumed full ownership of the project — jailed or banned from Indonesia.
Those messages, which insiders say pre-date the buyout, are now being scrutinised in light of subsequent events.
A Completed Buyout — Then a Reversal?
In media releases dated November 4 and November 5, both KINARA and Lux publicly acknowledged that Lux had assumed management control and ownership of Marina Bay City following a buyout of KINARA’s remaining stake.
However, months later, KINARA is now denying that any buyout occurred at all, despite those earlier announcements. Observers say this reversal raises serious credibility issues, particularly as millions of dollars are alleged to have been paid to KINARA in connection with the exit.
A Police Complaint After the Money Was Paid
What has intensified the dispute is evidence now circulating of a formal police complaint allegedly lodged after the buyout was completed.
The complaint reportedly centres on a $10,000 accounting issue inside a private company, a figure critics describe as immaterial and nonsensical in the context of a multi-million-dollar development and settlement.
The timing has prompted a blunt question from insiders:
Was a police complaint used as leverage or retaliation after a failed attempt to extract additional money?
Allegations of Corporate Extortion
Those close to the project argue the pattern is troubling:
•Threats allegedly made before the buyout
•A buyout completed and publicly acknowledged
•Funds allegedly received by KINARA
•A sudden denial that the buyout occurred
•A police complaint aimed at the buyer’s founder
To critics, this sequence resembles attempted corporate extortion, not a legitimate legal dispute — an effort, they allege, to pressure, intimidate, or potentially reclaim control of the Marina Bay City project after KINARA had exited.
Past Allegations Resurface
Adding further complexity, investigators and journalists are now revisiting historic Australian media reports concerning Adrian Campbell.
Public records and reporting from major Australian outlets have previously linked Campbell to multiple fraud-related matters, including:
•A case reported on the front page of the Border Mail, alleging he fled bail and relocated to Bali
•Allegations involving forged cheques
•A separate case involving the theft of Telstra copper cabling
•Charges reported as involving the Queensland Department of Fair Trading, with coverage in the Canberra Times and Brisbane Times
Campbell has previously disputed aspects of these matters, but their resurfacing now — alongside the Lombok dispute — has raised alarms among investors and regulators.
Unanswered Questions
As the situation unfolds, several questions remain unanswered:
•Why deny a buyout that was publicly announced by both parties months earlier?
•Why involve police over a minor sum after a multi-million-dollar settlement?
•Were threats made to use law enforcement as leverage?
•And does this dispute represent a genuine grievance — or an attempt to pressure Lux after the fact?
What Happens Next?
Insiders say further evidence, including documented communications, settlement records, and transaction trails, is now being reviewed. If substantiated, the implications could extend beyond a commercial dispute and into questions of abuse of process, false reporting, and corporate misconduct.
For now, Marina Bay City continues under Lux’s control, while scrutiny around KINARA and its CEO intensifies — not just in Indonesia, but internationally.
This story is developing.