ADVERTISEMENT

Ex-Wirecard CEO Rearrested on Claims He Hid Losses for Years

Ex-Wirecard CEO Braun Rearrested as Prosecutors Widen Probe

Former Wirecard AG Chief Executive Officer Markus Braun and two other former officials were arrested as prosecutors said the company knew about massive losses as early as 2015.

The trio conspired to obtain about 3.2 billion euros ($3.7 billion) in fraudulent loans, Munich prosecutors said Wednesday. Company officials allegedly decided to inflate the books with fake assets to make the company appear more attractive to investors, clients and lenders.

“The suspects knew at least by the end of 2015 that the Wirecard Group was losing money,” prosecutors said. “Deceived by faked accounts, banks in Germany and Japan as well as other investors granted funds of about 3.2 billion euros, which are now most likely lost.”

Ex-Wirecard CEO Rearrested on Claims He Hid Losses for Years

Wirecard filed for bankruptcy after acknowledging that 1.9 billion euros it had listed as assets probably didn’t exist, deepening its accounting woes. The company admitted that previous descriptions of its business with third parties, which processed transactions on Wirecard’s behalf, were “not correct” after pulling its financial results for 2019 and the first quarter of 2020.

Wirecard declined to comment before the prosecutors’ announcement. Braun’s lawyer, Alfred Dierlamm, didn’t immediately reply to an email and calls seeking comment.

The other two suspects detained Wednesday are former the former Chief Financial Officer Burkhard Ley and Stephan Freiherr von Erffa. Prosecutors identified them as “suspect L., CFO until the end of 2017” and “suspect E., the former head of accounting.”

Bloomberg was unable to locate lawyers for Ley and von Erffa.

All three are being investigated for fraud, breach of trust, forging accounts and market manipulation. A Munich court on Wednesday ruled that all three man have to stay in custody, according to the statement.

Shares of the company, which were worth more than Deutsche Bank AG only a few months ago, fell as much as 5.2% before recovering.

Wednesday’s arrests weren’t the first in the case and likely won’t be the last. Prosecutors openly lobbied at a press conference for witnesses to come forward, pointing out that suspects who cooperate are eligible for “considerable leniency.”

“But it’s also true that the value of any information continues to drop as our investigations proceed,” prosecutor Anne Leiding, told the press.

The aggressive approach is in sharp contrast to how prosecutors treated Wirecard before it owned up to its accounting problems. In previous years, prosecutors said they would investigate short sellers and even the media in the face of negative reports about the company’s finances.

“In our questioning we learned that there was a strict hierarchical system, characterized by an esprit de corps and pledges of allegiance to the then CEO,” Leiding said.

Braun had already been detained in June, but was released on bail a day later. Earlier this month, investigators arrested Oliver Bellenhaus, the former managing director of a Dubai-based Wirecard unit, who is cooperating with the case. Prosecutors on Wednesday said their new findings and the arrests were based in part on information provided by a “crown witness.”

Former Chief Operating Officer Jan Marsalek, who was fired in June after Wirecard disclosed about four fifths of its net cash was missing from its balance sheet, is still at large.

Marsalek apparently fled to Belarus last month and is presumably still there or in Russia, German media has reported.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.