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Carlos Ghosn, Ex-Nissan Chief, and Nissan Are Charged With Misstating His Pay Carlos Ghosn, Ex-Nissan Chief, and Nissan Are Charged With Misstating His Pay
(about 4 hours later)
TOKYO — Prosecutors in Japan on Monday indicted Carlos Ghosn, the former chairman of Nissan Motor, and the auto company, accusing them of violating financial laws by underreporting his compensation. TOKYO — Prosecutors in Japan on Monday indicted Carlos Ghosn, the former chairman of Nissan Motor, and the auto company itself on charges that they had violated financial laws by underreporting Mr. Ghosn’s compensation.
The indictment came three weeks after the Japanese authorities arrested Mr. Ghosn, 64, once one of the auto industry’s best-known and most respected executives. The allegations have shaken an auto empire that includes Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors in Japan and Renault of France. The indictment came three weeks after the Japanese authorities arrested Mr. Ghosn, who was once among the auto industry’s most respected executives. The allegations have upended a carmaking empire that includes Nissan and Mitsubishi Motors in Japan and Renault in France.
Motonari Otsuru, a lawyer for Mr. Ghosn, couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. In addition to the formal charges announced Monday, which cover allegations related to actions from 2011 to 2015, the authorities rearrested Mr. Ghosn on similar charges stemming from a subsequent period. Mr. Ghosn, 64, remains in detention in Tokyo, where he has been held since being arrested on Nov. 19.
In a statement, Nissan said it will strengthen its compliance efforts. “Nissan takes this situation extremely seriously,” it said. “Making false disclosures in annual securities reports greatly harms the integrity of Nissan’s public disclosures in the securities markets, and the company expresses its deepest regret.” Motonari Otsuru, a lawyer for Mr. Ghosn, could not immediately be reached for comment.
Prosecutors also indicted Greg Kelly, a onetime Nissan human resources manager and a member of the company’s board. Mr. Kelly has denied wrongdoing. In response to the indictment, Nissan said in a statement that it would strengthen its compliance efforts. It did not deny the charges.
Nissan has said it had uncovered misconduct by Mr. Ghosn that included underreporting his compensation and using company funds for personal expenses. In a news conference held the night of Mr. Ghosn’s arrest on Nov. 19, Hiroto Saikawa, Nissan’s chief executive, said that Mr. Kelly “has been determined to be the mastermind of this matter, together with Carlos Ghosn.” “Nissan takes this situation extremely seriously,” the statement said. “Making false disclosures in annual securities reports greatly harms the integrity of Nissan’s public disclosures in the securities markets, and the company expresses its deepest regret.”
Prosecutors in Tokyo have said they are investigating whether Mr. Ghosn hid tens of millions of dollars’ worth of compensation from 2011 to 2015. They have said he understated his true earnings by half, or more than $44 million, in reports to the Japanese financial authorities. Prosecutors also indicted Greg Kelly, a former Nissan human resources manager and member of the company’s board. Mr. Kelly, through his lawyer, Yoichi Kitamura, has denied wrongdoing. Mr. Kelly, like Mr. Ghosn, was rearrested Monday on allegations that he helped Mr. Ghosn underreport his compensation.
Nissan removed Mr. Ghosn as chairman shortly after his arrest and removed Mr. Kelly as executive director. Mr. Ghosn was also removed from a similar position at Mitsubishi Motors. He remains chairman at Renault, but the French company has appointed Thierry Bolloré, its chief operating officer, to assume Mr. Ghosn’s day-to-day responsibilities. Nissan has said it uncovered misconduct by Mr. Ghosn that included underreporting his compensation and using company funds for personal expenses. In a news conference held the night Mr. Ghosn and Mr. Kelly were initially arrested, Hiroto Saikawa, Nissan’s chief executive, said Mr. Kelly “has been determined to be the mastermind of this matter, together with Carlos Ghosn.”
According to the indictment, Mr. Ghosn and Mr. Kelly understated Mr. Ghosn’s earnings from 2011 to 2015 by half in securities filings: 4.99 billion yen ($44.3 million) compared with 9.86 billion yen ($88.4 million), including bonuses. Nissan was indicted on charges of having misstated Mr. Ghosn’s compensation in filings with the financial authorities.
Nissan, which conducted an internal inquiry into the alleged financial underreporting, removed Mr. Ghosn as chairman shortly after he was arrested and removed Mr. Kelly as executive director.
Mr. Ghosn was also removed from a similar position at Mitsubishi Motors. He remains chairman of Renault, but the French company has appointed Thierry Bolloré, its chief operating officer, to assume Mr. Ghosn’s day-to-day responsibilities.
In a new arrest warrant issued Monday, Tokyo prosectors said Mr. Ghosn and Mr. Kelly conspired to understate Mr. Ghosn’s pay in securities filings from June 2016 to June 2018. In the fillings, Mr. Ghosn’s compensation for the period was reported as 2.9 billion yen ($25.7 million). Prosecutors said they were investigating allegations that Mr. Ghosn was actually paid 7.17 billion yen ($63.6 million).
Prosecutors have yet to address allegations contained in Nissan’s internal report that Mr. Ghosn misused company funds for personal use.
A Nissan spokesman confirmed that the company had barred Mr. Ghosn’s family from a home the company bought for him in Rio de Janeiro.
“We believe that they would attempt to remove or destroy evidence,” said Nicholas Maxfield, a Nissan spokesman at the company’s headquarters in Yokohama. “And some of that evidence would be fairly incriminating.”
Legal experts in Japan said it was common for prosecutors to indict companies alongside individuals in financial crime cases.
“In this case it makes perfect sense,” said David Litt, a professor at Keio University Law School in Tokyo. “It would have been very hard for him to hide this without a number of people in the company knowing about it.”