The Oklahoman

Dubai holds British man in fraud case

Hedge fund trader Shah set to be extradited

- Malak Harb and Jon Gambrell

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates – Dubai police said Friday they arrested and planned to extradite a British man to Denmark, where he is wanted for allegedly mastermind­ing a $1.7 billion tax scheme, one of the country’s largest-ever fraud cases.

The arrest of hedge fund trader Sanjay Shah came after Danish officials signed an agreement in March allowing for extraditio­n between the United Arab Emirates and Denmark.

Shah has maintained his innocence in interviews with journalist­s while living in Dubai over the last few year, but never appeared in Denmark to answer the accusation­s.

It wasn’t clear if Shah, 52, had a local lawyer in the Emirates. A court date did not appear to have been set in Dubai, the commercial capital of the seven-sheikhdom federation of the UAE. Prosecutor­s did not respond to a request for comment on Friday, the start of the Emirati weekend.

A spokesman once associated with Shah, who ran the firm Solo Capital Partners, did not respond to a request for comment. The hedge fund manager had run a center in Dubai for children with autusm that shut down in 2020 amid the attempts by Denmark to extradite him. He also ran the British-based charity Autism Rocks, which put on shows by major performers to raise money.

In a statement, Dubai police Brig.

Gen. Jamal Al Jallaf said the emirate received an internatio­nal arrest warrant from Denmark for Shah. Al Jallaf said Shah was accused of a fraud that saw foreign businesses pretend to own shares in Danish companies and claim tax refunds.

“The fraud scheme, known as ‘cum-ex’ trading, involved submitting thousands of applicatio­ns to the Danish Treasury on behalf of investors and companies from several countries around the world in order to receive dividend tax refunds,” Al Jallaf said. Danish authoritie­s say the scheme ran for some three years beginning in 2012.

In a joint statement, Denmark’s Justice and Foreign Ministries praised Dubai’s arrest of Shah.

“The Danish Treasury has been cheated for a staggering amount, and ... it should not be possible for suspected perpetrato­rs to hide in the Middle East,” Justice Minister Mattias Tesfaye said.

Shah is one of several suspects sought by Denmark in the case.

 ?? CHRISTOPHE­R PIKE/AP FILE ?? Accused in a Danish tax fraud case, Sanjay Shah has maintained his innocence while living in Dubai.
CHRISTOPHE­R PIKE/AP FILE Accused in a Danish tax fraud case, Sanjay Shah has maintained his innocence while living in Dubai.

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