Wirecard witness admits guilt but pins German fraud blame on ex-CEO
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[December 19, 2022] By
Christina Amann
MUNICH (Reuters) -The key prosecution witness in Germany's biggest
post-war fraud trial admitted guilt on Monday in a scam that led to
Wirecard's collapse but said the company was a "swindle" from the start,
with former chief executive Markus Braun at its core.
Wirecard's downfall two years ago shook the German business
establishment, putting politicians who had backed it under intense
scrutiny, along with regulators that took years to investigate
allegations against the payments company.
Oliver Bellenhaus, who was head of Wirecard's subsidiary in Dubai,
became a key witness in the case after turning himself in to German
authorities in 2020.
Bellenhaus is on trial along with former CEO Braun, who denies
wrongdoing and accuses others of running a shadow operation without his
knowledge, and one other high-ranking manager of the defunct blue-chip
company.
They face charges including fraud and market manipulation and could be
jailed for up to 15 years if convicted.
Florian Eder, a lawyer for Bellenhaus, told Reuters that the cooperation
of his client should result in a "very significant reduction" in his
sentence. Bellenhaus has been in custody for close to two years.
At the start of the trial this month, prosecutors accused the defendants
of being part of a gang that invented vast sums of phantom revenue
through bogus transactions with partner companies to mislead creditors
and investors.
Prosecutors said the deception allowed managers to siphon money out of
Wirecard for years.
"Small lies became big lies ... It was a swindle from the beginning,"
Bellenhaus told the court, saying he deeply regretted his involvement
and the damage it caused.
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Wirecard's former CEO Markus Braun
arrives in the courtroom as his trial continues, after the German
payments company collapsed in the wake of a fraud scandal in 2020,
in Munich, Germany, December 12, 2022. REUTERS/Lukas Barth/File
Photo
In testimony last week, Braun's lawyers alleged that Bellenhaus was
the main perpetrator of the fraud at Wirecard, which began
processing payments for pornography and online gambling and rose to
be a DAX company worth $28 billion.
But Bellenhaus told the court on Monday it was "blind loyalty" to
Braun, whom he described as an "absolutist CEO", that had landed him
in court in Munich.
"Braun gave the marching orders and everyone followed," he said.
In his 100-page statement, Bellenhaus described how accounts were
fudged and revenues fabricated.
At one point, staff rented space in a Dubai hotel, where they
generated fake transactions for an audit, he said, adding that the
remote location was to chosen to hide from journalists and for its
proximity to a shopping mall for food.
Founded in 1999 and based in the Munich suburb of Aschheim, Wirecard
became a showpiece for a new type of German tech company that could
compete with the established titans of Europe's largest economy.
But after successfully lobbying German authorities to investigate
those who were scrutinising its finances, Wirecard was eventually
forced to admit in June 2020 that 1.9 billion euros were missing
from its balance sheet.
A verdict is not expected until 2024 at the earliest.
(Reporting by Christina AmannAdditional reporting by Marta
OroszWriting by Tom SimsEditing by Alexander Smith and David
Goodman)
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