Wirecard Ex-Boss Markus Braun Charged With Fraud
FRANKFURT, Germany —
German prosecutors have charged the former CEO of payments company Wirecard and
two other ex-managers with fraud and false accounting in connection with the
firm's collapse last year amid allegations that much of its revenue and assets
were faked.
Prosecutors in Munich said Monday that ex-CEO Markus Braun
signed off on financial reports he knew were false. They said the firm booked
nonexistent revenue it attributed to multiple partnerships in other countries
and used fake documents to show it had funds that it did not.
The firm's former head of accounting and the managing
director of a Dubai-based subsidiary also were charged.
The fraud cost banks 3.1 billion euros ($3.4 billion) in
loans and writedowns, according to the prosecutors' statement.
One of the central figures in the case, the company's former
chief operating officer Jan Marsalek, is being sought by authorities,
prosecutors said.
Braun's attorney said the charges were “seriously flawed”
and “assumed a false picture of the facts," the dpa news agency reported.
The defense says Braun was unaware of machinations by others. He remains in
custody.
Wirecard grew rapidly and wound up being listed among
Germany's top blue-chip stocks before the firm filed insolvency proceedings in
2020, saying 1.9 billion euros that had been on its balance sheet could not be
found.
A court must first agree that the case can proceed before a
trial can be held.
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