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Ghosn Accuses Nissan of Sham Takedown Before Grabbing Microphone

Carlos Ghosn leveled a blistering attack against his former employer Nissan.

Ghosn Accuses Nissan of Sham Takedown Before Grabbing Microphone
File Photo: Carlos Ghosn, the then chief executive officer of Nissan Motor Co., smiles during an interview at the Los Angeles Auto Show in Los Angeles, California, U.S. (Photographer: Armando Arorizo/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Carlos Ghosn, the former business luminary who fled criminal charges in Japan, leveled a blistering attack against his former employer Nissan Motor Co., accusing the company of scapegoating him to block further integration with French partner Renault SA.

Nissan’s characterization of an internal investigation that it completed months ago as robust and thorough is “a gross perversion of the truth,” Ghosn said in a statement released ahead of his highly anticipated first press conference Wednesday.

Ghosn Accuses Nissan of Sham Takedown Before Grabbing Microphone

The Nissan internal probe was designed to retain the Japanese automaker’s independence and protect favored executives while disparaging Ghosn’s allies, his defense team said in the statement.

“That investigation was never about finding the truth,” the team said. “It was initiated and carried out for the specific, predetermined purpose of taking down Carlos Ghosn to prevent him from further integrating Nissan and Renault.”

The salvo is an apparent response to Nissan saying Monday that it will take “appropriate legal action” against Ghosn following his decision last week to jump bail in Japan and flee to Lebanon.

Ghosn was arrested just over a year ago at Tokyo’s Haneda Airport, kicking off a legal saga that saw him detained for months in solitary confinement before being released on bail, re-arrested and bailed out again. Ghosn was under house arrest, facing trial for alleged crimes including understating his income and breach of trust charges when on Dec. 31 -- as Japan entered a week-long holiday -- he fled to Lebanon to escape what he described as a “rigged Japanese justice system.”

--With assistance from Ania Nussbaum and Kae Inoue.

To contact the reporter on this story: Chester Dawson in Southfield at cdawson54@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Craig Trudell at ctrudell1@bloomberg.net, Keith Naughton

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