Penticton Herald

EU pandemic funds worth $650M stolen

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BRUSSELS (AP) — Police in Italy, Austria, Romania and Slovakia arrested 22 people Thursday as part of an investigat­ion into the suspected siphoning of hundreds of millions of euros in post-pandemic relief funds from the European Union.

The 600 million euros (US$650 million) were part of Italy’s post-pandemic money, the European Public Prosecutor’s Office said.

The EPPO said it suspects a criminal organizati­on of having diverted the non-refundable funds from the Italian National Recovery and Resilience Plan between 2021 and 2023.

The Italian program is funded by the EU’s Recovery and Resilience Facility, a multi-billion-euro plan that was devised to help EU countries breathe new life into their virus-ravaged economies.

According to EU figures, Italy’s national recovery and resilience plan is the largest in the bloc, worth 194.4 billion euros ($211 billion) in grants and loans and representi­ng 10.8% of the country’s gross domestic product in 2019.

The EPPO said financial police from Venice, Italy, executed an order for freezing issued by the pre-trial judge on assets worth more than 600 million euros.

Financial police in Venice said luxury flats and villas, significan­t amounts of cryptocurr­ency, Rolex watches, Cartier jewelry, gold and luxury cars were also seized.

“With the support of law enforcemen­t agencies from the other Member States involved, 22 individual­s have been arrested in Italy, Austria, Romania and Slovakia,” the EPPO said.

“Eight suspects have been placed under pre-trial detention, whereas (another) 14 suspects are held under house arrest, and one accountant was prohibited from practising his profession.

The premises of the suspects and of the investigat­ed companies have also been the target of searches and seizure of evidence.”

The EPPO said the criminal organizati­on allegedly used false corporate balance sheets as they applied for non-repayable grants to support fictitious small and medium-size companies expanding to foreign markets.

The criminals are suspected to have been working in cahoots with a network of “accountant­s, service providers and public notaries” to get the money they transferre­d to bank accounts in Austria, Romania and Slovakia.

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