Los Angeles, Dec 29 : A former Singapore banker was arrested in Los Angeles and accused of
helping "liquidate" hundreds of millions of dollars in the Olympus Corp
(TYO:7733) accounting scandal, one of the biggest corporate frauds in Japan's
history.
Chan Ming Fon, who resides in Singapore and is a citizen of
Taiwan, is the latest former executive to become ensnared in the $1.7 billion
accounting cover-up at the camera and medical equipment maker.
Three
former Olympus executives pleaded guilty over charges related to the fraud in
September, and the company has also admitted it used improper accounting to
conceal massive investment losses under a scheme that began in the
1990s.
Court papers said Chan was paid $10 million by Olympus or entities
controlled by Olympus for his role in the decade-long fraud.
He is
charged with one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, which carries a
maximum penalty of 20 years.
Olympus declined to comment. Chan's family
in Singapore could not be reached for comment.
Chan, 50, was interviewed
by the Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) this week, and was being held in
custody ahead of scheduled appearance in a federal court in Los Angeles, U.S.
authorities said.
"The defendant had a direct role in the secret
liquidation of hundreds of millions of dollars of Olympus investments. He then
waged a six-year campaign to conceal that misdeed by lying, certifying to
auditors that the investments still existed years after liquidation," said FBI
Assistant Director-in-Charge George Venizelos.
The accounting fraud at
93-year-old Olympus was exposed in October 2011 by chief executive Michael
Woodford, who was fired after he questioned dubious deals that were later found
to have been used to hide losses.
The three former executives who pleaded
guilty had been identified by an investigative panel, commissioned by Olympus,
as the main suspects in the fraud seeking to delay the reckoning from risky
investments made in the late-1980s bubble economy.
Former chairman
Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, former executive vice president Hisashi Mori and former
auditor Hideo Yamada pleaded guilty to charges that they inflated the company's
net worth in financial statements for five fiscal years to March 2011. They are
awaiting sentencing.
Revelations of the huge accounting fraud have
revived calls for more outside scrutiny of its boardrooms but have failed to
trigger sweeping corporate governance reforms similar to those introduced a
decade ago in the wake of U.S. scandals such as at Enron.
In 2005, Chan
established an entity in the Cayman Islands called SG Bond Plus Fund, the
complaint said.
Until about 2010, Chan submitted false and misleading
documents to Olympus' outside auditor regarding hundreds of millions of dollars'
worth of assets purportedly maintained by Chan at SG Bond for the benefit of
Olympus, it said.
Chan had actually transferred the assets to a British
Virgin Island-based entity controlled by Olympus, the complaint said.
The
case is filed in federal court in New York.
An investigative panel
report, commissioned by Olympus last year, mentioned a banker referred only by
his last name Chan as an outside collaborator who first met Olympus executives
Yamada and Mori in 1998.
At the time "Chan" was working at Commerzbank in
Singapore, but resigned in 2000. After leaving Societe Generale in 2004, the
report said Chan formed his own company where he continued to work for former
Olympus executives.
Ends
SA/EN
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Ex-banker arrested in U.S. over Olympus fraud
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