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Ghosn Freed on Bail in Cap, Face Mask After 108 Days in Jail

Getting out on bail would allow Ghosn to prepare for a trial that’s still likely months away.

Ghosn Freed on Bail in Cap, Face Mask After 108 Days in Jail
Carlos Ghosn, former chairman of Nissan Motor Co., second left in blue hat, walks out of the Tokyo Detention House in Tokyo, Japan. (Photographer: Toru Hanai/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Carlos Ghosn walked out of a Tokyo prison on bail after 108 days in detention, vowing to fight allegations of financial crimes that could imprison the former Nissan Motor Co. chairman for as long as a decade.

Flanked by police officers and wearing a light blue baseball cap, face mask and eyeglasses, Ghosn climbed into a silver Suzuki van and left the detention center where he’d been locked up since his Nov. 19 arrest. He went first to the office of one of his Japanese lawyers, where he changed into a business suit before leaving in a black Toyota minivan.

A Tokyo court on Tuesday granted his release and subsequently upheld its decision after an appeal by prosecutors. His bail of 1 billion yen ($8.9 million) is among the highest ever in Japan.

Ghosn Freed on Bail in Cap, Face Mask After 108 Days in Jail

Getting out on bail allows Ghosn to prepare for a trial that’s likely months away. His surprise arrest and imprisonment on allegations of financial misdeeds roiled the two-decade auto alliance between Nissan and Renault SA and cast a harsh light on aspects of Japan’s legal system. He initially wasn’t granted access to lawyers and had two previous bail applications rejected.

“I am innocent and totally committed to vigorously defending myself in a fair trial against these meritless and unsubstantiated accusations,” Ghosn, 64, said earlier in a statement.

CHARGES AGAINST CARLOS GHOSN:

  • Aggravated breach of trust for acts related to payments -- from a pool of money that only he had the authority to use -- to a company controlled by the automaker’s Saudi Arabian business partner, Khaled Juffali.
  • Filing false statements to regulators regarding about $80 million in deferred income during his time as Nissan’s chairman

To win approval of his bail application, Ghosn agreed to several restrictions.

CARLOS GHOSN’S BAIL CONDITIONS

  • Must reside in Japan and cannot travel abroad
  • Must agree to having cameras at exit and entrance of his home
  • Will have restrictions using his mobile phone
  • Must agree not to access the internet
  • Must not contact people involved in the case
  • Can only use the computer at lawyer’s office during business hours

“There will be very intense surveillance,” Francois Zimeray, a French lawyer representing Ghosn’s wife and four children, told Europe 1 radio on Wednesday. “It’s not total liberty. But compared to the nightmare of his incarceration, with minimal rights in the Kosuge jail, for him it’s an improvement.”

Ghosn Freed on Bail in Cap, Face Mask After 108 Days in Jail

Ghosn’s arrest rocked the world’s biggest auto alliance -- which includes Mitsubishi Motors Corp. -- at a time when the industry globally is wrestling with an array of challenges, from slowing sales in key markets such as the U.S. and China to long-term technological change requiring massive investment.

Long the glue binding the partnership together, Ghosn was chairman of all three companies, chief executive officer of Renault and head of the alliance before his arrest. He remains a member of the board at Renault until the annual shareholders’ meeting in June.

In prison, Ghosn endured frequent interrogation by prosecutors and had only limited contact with his legal team and family. The case put Japan’s justice system under scrutiny, leading to criticism of its reliance on defendants’ confessions, which often are made without a lawyer present.

Now that Ghosn has been released he will be able to defend himself “freely” and “calmly,” Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire told reporters in Paris Wednesday.

Ghosn Freed on Bail in Cap, Face Mask After 108 Days in Jail

Ghosn’s lead lawyer, Junichiro Hironaka, previously said the case raises questions about the fairness of Japan’s legal system, repeating a statement by the International Federation for Human Rights. He also has suggested the arrest was the result of a conspiracy inside the automaker, though he didn’t name any Nissan officials.

“Nissan does not have any role in decisions made by courts or prosecutors, and is therefore not in a position to offer a comment,” Nicholas Maxfield, a spokesman for the carmaker, said Tuesday in an email.

Nissan and Renault are reviewing their finances and the pay of top managers in the wake of the arrest and began a joint audit of the Dutch company that oversees their partnership. The probes already shone a light on some controversial practices from Ghosn’s tenure at Renault, including celebrations at the Versailles palace outside Paris.

Ghosn Freed on Bail in Cap, Face Mask After 108 Days in Jail

Thierry Bollore, who replaced Ghosn as Renault CEO in January, told Bloomberg Television in Geneva on Tuesday that, so far, the French carmaker’s probe hasn’t uncovered any governance issues beyond the “little story” of the Versailles events. He said he expects the review will be completed this month, and he declined to comment on Ghosn’s effort to win bail.

Nissan took an $83 million charge last month related to the future compensation of Ghosn as it warned of its lowest profit in six years. The company’s debt rating then was cut by S&P Global Ratings to A- from A.

Confronting a Japanese legal system with a 99 percent conviction rate, Ghosn last month replaced a defense team led by former local prosecutor Motonari Otsuru with one overseen by Hironaka, who is known for aggressive tactics defending high-profile clients such as a former senior bureaucrat accused of corruption.

--With assistance from Ichiro Suzuki, Angus Whitley and Carol Matlack.

To contact the reporters on this story: Lisa Du in Tokyo at ldu31@bloomberg.net;Kae Inoue in Tokyo at kinoue@bloomberg.net;Ma Jie in Tokyo at jma124@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Young-Sam Cho at ycho2@bloomberg.net, Ville Heiskanen, Michael Tighe

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