Malta Independent

Czech man fighting extraditio­n claims he was kidnapped and made to sign documents

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A Czech national currently fighting extraditio­n claimed in court that he had twice been kidnapped and forced to sign documents implicatin­g him in a tax evasion scheme for which he faces charges in the Czech Republic. One of the kidnapping­s allegedly took place in Gozo.

Marek Drga is wanted by Czech authoritie­s to face charges relating to over €350,000 in unpaid Value Added Tax (VAT).

Drga was arrested in November and his extraditio­n was approved by the Maltese courts last month. An appeal was subsequent­ly filed claiming that the accusation­s brought by Czech authoritie­s were in bad faith and that too much time had lapsed since 2011, when the offences allegedly took place.

Drga testified that he had owned the company Future Constructi­ons between 2009 and 2010 before it was sold off to Thomas Frania, after which Drga stayed on as an employee for six months. The company was then sold again to Renata Sedláčková in February 2011.

According to a European Arrest Warrant, Drga was involved in a tax evasion scheme between March and May 2011, whereby VAT was claimed on electrical equipment purchased VAT-free from Slovakia.

Drga claimed that before he had sold off his company, he was told by Miroslav Zaremba — a constructi­on magnate and sub-contractor — that his company still needed to enter into a contract for the purchase of new materials and to act as an intermedia­ry in the purchase of nickel cathodes.

In 2012, Drga claimed, he started receiving anonymous phone calls enquiring about the identity of the company’s owner and was pressure to sign a document relating to a change of ownership between Frania and Sedláčková, which he refused to do.

He left the Czech Republic in 2012 after what he described as threats made by a police officer as a result of his refusing to sign the document. It was also at this point that Drga learned of tax evasion charges brought against Zaremba. According to his testimony, Drga was the target of a kidnapping attempt the day before he was due to leave the country.

Following some time spent in Italy, he relocated to Gozo in October 2012, where he worked as a gym instructor.

Second kidnapping in Gozo

In January 2013, Drga said, he was again subject to a kidnapping, this time in Victoria (Gozo). He described how he had been abducted by a group of men who threatened his life and searched his person and mobile. He agreed to sign 50 pages of documents and was told he would be killed if he ever returned to the Czech Republic. When asked by defence lawyer Robert Montalto why he had failed to file a police report following the incident, Drga said that he had only been in Malta for a short while and feared retaliatio­n.

Echoing his client’s sentiment, Montalto noted that the Czech prosecutio­n was acting in bad faith as there was no objective evidence linking Drga to the alleged offences. He argued that the Czech authoritie­s were only interested in using his client as a witness against Zaremba. The lawyer called on the court to use its residual special powers and repeal the first court’s decision ordering Drga’s extraditio­n.

Lawyer George Camilleri, from the Office of the Attorney General, insisted that there was no evidence supporting Drga’s claims, questionin­g their legitimacy.

Judgement is set for Friday, 12 January.

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