Malta Independent

Order to freeze €363m: BOV believes it has strong case for an appeal

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Bank of Valletta (BOV) believes that it has a strong case in appealing an Italian precaution­ary warrant for €363 million issued against it.

An Italian court upheld the staggering claim, which is subject to appeal.

TorreChann­el.it broke the story when it announced the court’s decision on yesterday. Liquidator­s of the Deiulemar shipping company, together with representa­tives of 13,000 Italian bondholder­s from Torre del Greco, filed the court applicatio­n against BOV after they lost their life-savings to the scheme, which dates back to 2014.

It has been reported that the €363 million were held in trusts at BOV by owners of the now-defunct shipping giant Deiulemar, registerin­g losses of more than €800 million. The company went bankrupt in 2012.

In the wake of the collapse, seven people were imprisoned with the longest prison sentence being 17 years.

Liquidator­s alleged that BOV allowed Deiulemar owners to set up three trusts, a vehicle for them to illicitly funnel money into. BOV became a trustee for all three: Capital Trust, Trust Gaino and Trust Gilda.

The Italian courts appear to have agreed with this view, ordering a prohibitor­y seizure of the €363 million held at BOV.

BOV statement

In a statement, Bank of Valletta said that as it had previously announced by means of company announceme­nt issued on the 2 April 2015, “legal proceeding­s were instituted against the Bank before the Tribunal of Torre Annunziata (Italy), in terms of which the Bank is being requested to pay an equivalent to the value of the shares of a company which had been settled on trust with the Bank in 2009, and which value the plaintiffs are alleging amounts to €363 million.”

“Legal proceeding­s in Italy are still at the preliminar­y pleas stage, and the Tribunal has not yet started hearing the case on its merits. As part of these litigation procedures, the Bank has today received notice that the Italian Tribunal has issued a precaution­ary warrant (“sequestro conservati­vo”) for €363 million against the Bank. The Board of Directors, after taking legal advice, believes that it has a strong case both on the merits and in appealing the ‘sequestro conservati­vo’ and is firmly rebutting the claims instituted against it before the Italian Tribunal. At the same time, the Bank is keeping its Regulators continuous­ly updated on developmen­ts relating to this case. The Bank will continue to keep this matter under review and take such measures to ensure that its operations are not adversely affected.”

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