Ottawa Citizen

Conrad Black to appear before OSC

Ex-media baron, 2 colleagues to appear before OSC Aug. 16

- LINDA NGUYEN

Ex-media mogul to face hearing with securities commission more than eight years after being accused of fraud.

TORONTO Ex-media baron Conrad Black and two former executives at Hollinger Inc. have been scheduled to appear before the Ontario Securities Commission, more than eight years after being accused of fraud.

A hearing has been set for Aug. 16, the OSC said in a notice late Friday.

Black, John Boultbee and Peter Atkinson are accused of cheating shareholde­rs and tax authoritie­s in the U.S. and Canada, specifical­ly, improperly diverting proceeds from the now-defunct media giant Hollinger Internatio­nal to themselves through “non-competitio­n” payments.

It’s alleged they did not have approval for these payments, and had made misreprese­ntations about them through public disclosure.

The charges had initially been filed in March 2005, but were put on hold due to related legal action in the U.S. The OSC said it has decided to restart its case since those proceeding­s have wrapped up.

Also on Friday, the OSC said it was withdrawin­g separate allegation­s against Hollinger Inc., because the company was in court protection from its creditors and is subject to a cease trade order. It was delisted on the Toronto Stock Exchange in August 2008. Hollinger has since been sold off piece by piece over the past few years.

In July 2007, Black, Boultbee and Atkinson were found guilty of three counts of fraud each by a U.S. jury. Black was also convicted of one count of obstructio­n of justice for removing documents from the Toronto offices of Hollinger, which at one time controlled a newspaper empire that operated in Canada, the United States, Britain and elsewhere.

After exhausting their appeals, Black was sentenced to 42 months and fined $125,000. He served 37 months in a Florida prison before returning to Canada under a temporary resident permit as he is no longer a Canadian citizen.

In a highly-publicized battle in 2001, he renounced his Canadian citizenshi­p so he could accept a peerage in the British House of Lords.

Boultbee was sentenced to time served, fined $500 and ordered to pay $15,000 in restitutio­n to the Sun-Times Media Group. Atkinson was given time served and fined $3,000.

If found guilty, the OSC will determine what kind of reprimands to pursue against the accused, including imposing a permanent ban on them from acting as an officer or director of a public company in Ontario. They can also be banned from trading or acquiring any securities.

In November 2012, the OSC withdrew charges against Black’s for- mer business partner, David Radler, as part of a plea agreement that led to him being barred from heading a public company in Ontario.

Radler is also prohibited from becoming a registrant, employee, director or officer of a registrant or an affiliated public company in Ontario. He must also refrain from directly or indirectly trading or acquiring securities related to Hollinger.

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