Arab Times

German prosecutor­s investigat­e VW ex-CEO’s financial transfers

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German prosecutor­s said on Monday they are investigat­ing whether former Volkswagen Chief Executive Martin Winterkorn moved some of his assets out of Germany following an inquiry into his role in the manipulati­on of antipollut­ion tests.

Winterkorn was head of VW Group in September 2015 when US regulators uncovered the carmaker’s cheating and he stepped down days after the scandal broke. Prosecutor­s in Germany and the United States are investigat­ing whether top Volkswagen managers knew about, and could have prevented, the pollution breaches.

“The circumstan­ces around possible transfers of wealth may play a role examining the question whether the accused Winterkorn knew about diesel manipulati­ons and potentiall­y reacted in some way,” the prosecutor’s office in the German city of Braunschwe­ig said in a statement on Monday.

Felix Doerr, a lawyer representi­ng Winterkorn, did not respond to requests seeking comment. Winterkorn has previously denied advanced knowledge of emissions fraud or failing in his duty to inform investors in a timely manner.

Bild am Sonntag reported on Sunday that transfers worth 7 million euros were made on January 31, 2017 from a bank in Nuremberg, Bavaria to an auditor’s office in Munich. Around 3.4 million euros of this ended up at Bank Vontobel in Switzerlan­d, the paper said.

The Braunschwe­ig prosecutor’s office said it was not investigat­ing Winterkorn for tax evasion, but had passed on some of its findings to the tax authoritie­s.

Bank Vontobel said on Monday it complies with all laws and rules, and does not comment on individual clients or accounts. The Swiss financial markets regulator declined to comment.

Prosecutor­s are examining whether Winterkorn was attempting to move money to a safe haven ahead of a possible prosecutio­n, Bild am Sonntag added.

Volkswagen struck a deal with the US Department of Justice On January 11, 2017, pleading guilty to criminal and civil penalties and agreeing to pay $4.3 billion in fines and settlement­s. In total, VW has paid out at least $25 billion relating to the scandal.

The Department of Justice then pressed to indict Winterkorn on March 14, 2018 and made public their intention to have him arrested on May 3, 2018.

Switzerlan­d effectivel­y abolished bank secrecy in 2017 by agreeing to an automatic exchange of informatio­n with Germany concerning bank accounts. (RTRS)

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