Court declares missing German billionaire Karl-Erivan Haub, dead
BERLIN — A German court on Friday officially declared billionaire Karl-Erivan Haub dead, more than three years after the head of retail group Tengelmann went missing in the Swiss Alps.
Haub, who was 58, was training for a ski mountaineering race
when he disappeared under Switzerland’s famous Matterhorn peak, located on the
southern border with Italy.
He was last seen on the morning of April 7, 2018, as he
headed up a mountain lift with skis and a daypack, and was reported missing to
police the following morning after he failed to show up at his hotel in the
Swiss resort of Zermatt.
Haub’s family gave up hope of finding him alive after a week
and the search for him was officially called off in October 2018.
The district court in Cologne, where Haub lived, said Friday
it has now formally declared him dead, giving the time of death as midnight on
April 7, 2018. Haub was born on March 2, 1960 in Tacoma, Washington, and was a
German-US dual citizen.
Haub’s brothers, company and wife had applied to have him
officially declared dead. The court said it was satisfied with the evidence.
His younger brother, Christian Haub, was named as
Tengelmann’s sole CEO after the disappearance. The two had run Tengelmann
together since 2000.
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