Prosecutors consider DiCaprio a witness who can provide useful insights about a swashbuckling Malaysian financier alleged to have pilfered and laundered billions of dollars from the investment fund and then financed a lobbying campaign to end the investigation, the people said. DiCaprio is not a target of the probe, they emphasized.

The financier, Low Taek Jho, was charged in federal court in New York late last year in connection with theft and money laundering. Prosecutors have pursued related cases concerning ex-Goldman Sachs bankers they allege were involved in laundering money and a Justice Department employee who admitted to helping the lobbying campaign.

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Grand jury proceedings are secret, so it is unclear exactly what DiCaprio told grand jurors. Also unclear is how authorities got him into and out of the federal courthouse without drawing notice.

A Justice Department spokesman and a representative for DiCaprio declined to comment. In the past, DiCaprio’s spokesman has said the actor was cooperating with the probe and was “entirely supportive of all efforts to assure that justice is done in this matter.”

The case — which has come to be known by the shorthand “1MDB” for the investment fund that authorities say was looted — has long been star-studded, though DiCaprio is perhaps the biggest name to emerge thus far.

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Prosecutors also recently alleged in court papers that former Fugees rapper Prakazrel “Pras” Michel was involved in setting up accounts to make payments for Low’s lobbying effort to kill the investigation and that Michel, acting as an intermediary for Low, hired the owner of an investment firm to press the case with the Trump administration.

People familiar with the case said the owner of the investment firm was Elliott Broidy, a veteran Republican fundraiser who helped corral big donors to support Trump’s presidential campaign. Neither Broidy nor Michel has been charged with a crime, though people familiar with the case said investigators are still exploring whether they violated any laws.

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The lobbying effort, prosecutors said, was unsuccessful.

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Michel has denied wrongdoing, and Broidy’s attorney has declined to comment on court papers that describe his client’s lobbying work, though the attorney has noted the papers do not identify his client by name.

Prosecutors have alleged in court papers that Low cozied up to DiCaprio, allowing the actor to gamble on his tab at the Venetian casino in Las Vegas, giving him artwork and helping him get funding for the hit movie “The Wolf of Wall Street.” Low, a businessman who has close relationships with high-ranking government officials in Malaysia and Abu Dhabi, is thought to be in China.

He and DiCaprio were introduced, prosecutors have said, by Riza Shahriz bin Abdul Aziz, the stepson of former Malaysian prime minister Najib Razak, who was charged in Malaysia in connection with the scandal.

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In 2016, prosecutors moved to seize assets including proceeds from the film, which they alleged was financed in part with stolen funds routed to a production company co-founded by the former Malaysian prime minister’s stepson. DiCaprio had thanked Low by name in accepting a Golden Globe for his role in the film.