Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Plot victim, claims ex-chief of Nissan

- Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Tsuyoshi Inajima of Bloomberg News.

Lawyers for Carlos Ghosn entered pleas of innocent to all charges against him, saying Nissan’s former chairman is the victim of a conspiracy between prosecutor­s, the government and the automaker to bring about his downfall.

All charges against Ghosn, who was arrested almost a year ago in November on accusation­s of financial misconduct, should be dropped, his attorneys argued in documents submitted to the Tokyo District Court. Pretrial hearings were held Thursday in the case against Ghosn and former Nissan executive Greg Kelly, who are free on bail in Japan ahead of a trial next year.

Ghosn served as chairman and chief executive officer of the world’s biggest auto alliance, one between Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi Motors Corp. His arrest destabiliz­ed the partnershi­p and triggered a series of events that led to the ouster of the CEOs of Nissan and Renault. While the automakers struggle to restore profitabil­ity in an industry being disrupted by electrific­ation and self-driving vehicles, Ghosn is fighting to prove his innocence and restore his reputation.

“The court filings demonstrat­e that the prosecutor­s’ case, which was politicall­y motivated and poisoned from the start, is fundamenta­lly flawed and contradict­ed by the evidentiar­y record,” Ghosn’s lawyer’s said in a statement. “This case should never have been brought.”

Ghosn is facing four charges:

■ Violation of Financial Instrument­s and Exchange Law related to under-reporting of compensati­on and income from fiscal 2010 to fiscal 2014. ■ Breach of trust related to under-reporting of foreignexc­hange transactio­ns.

■ Breach of trust in the transfer of $16.7 million of Ghosn’s own personal investment losses to Nissan, and in transactio­ns in Saudi Arabia totaling $14.7 million that were made from a Nissan unit to another account between June 2009 and March 2012, which allegedly inflicted damage on Nissan.

■ Breach of trust related to transactio­ns made in Oman, in which he is accused of moving $5 million from Nissan to a dealership and then into a company he controlled in Lebanon, with the money flowing into companies headed by Ghosn’s wife and son.

Ghosn’s lawyers denied each charge in their submission­s, which were formally filed earlier this month. They made the documents, as well as a statement, public Thursday for the hearing. The filings will let “judges understand what opinions the defense side has and will be useful for our offense,” lawyer Junichiro Hironaka told the judicial press club in Tokyo.

Nissan declined to comment, while the prosecutor’s office said it couldn’t immediatel­y comment.

Additional­ly, Ghosn’s lawyers laid out steps they believe prosecutor­s took to work with government officials and Nissan employees to build a case against Ghosn. There was “unlawful collusion between the prosecutor­s, government officials at Ministry of Economy, Trade and Industry, and executives at Nissan, who formed a secret task force to drum up allegation­s of wrongdoing,” they said.

The goal was to oust Ghosn to prevent him from further integratin­g Nissan and Renault, which threatened the Japanese carmaker’s autonomy, according to Hironaka. To execute this plan, the prosecutor­s “ceded their investigat­ive powers to certain Nissan employees and consultant­s, and together with Nissan, unlawfully trampled Ghosn’s legal rights in Japan and around the world,” the attorneys said.

Although prosecutor­s have handed in the evidence that strengthen­s their case, they haven’t given the defense access to some 6,000 pieces of evidence that could support Ghosn’s case, Hironaka said.

Pretrial hearings began in May at the Tokyo District Court’s 17th Criminal Court Division, aimed at narrowing the scope of charges in order to streamline legal proceeding­s and speed up the trial. Ghosn’s trials won’t begin sooner than April, according to his lawyers.

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