The New Zealand Herald

German spy on trial for tax evasion

- Justin Huggler — Telegraph Group Ltd

Germany’s answer to James Bond faced what may

prove to be the greatest challenge of his career yesterday as he went on trial on charges of tax evasion.

Werner Mauss, a former intelligen­ce agent described as a “living legend” in Germany, is accused of evading € 15.2 million in taxes on profits from offshore investment­s.

He denies the charges and claims the offshore accounts were opened by Western and Israeli intelligen­ce agencies to fund covert operations around the world, including hostage releases. The 76-year-old Mauss has claimed he helped avert a Mafia poisoning at- tempt against Pope Benedict XVI, negotiated between Israel and Hamas, and took part in intelligen­ce operations against Isis (Islamic State).

Despite his claims, it has never been entirely clear how much Mauss is master-spy, and how much master selfpublic­ist.

He appeared at yesterday’s hearing in Bochum in a parka coat with the hood pulled up over his head. The indictment against him listed four known aliases.

Though he has been a near mythic figure in Germany since the 1980s, there was no known photograph of him in circulatio­n until 2000. He offered no opening statement to the court. His lawyers claimed he cannot mount a “proper defence” because he is still subject to secrecy agreements and cannot testify without the express permission of the German Government.

A freelance agent rather than a government intelligen­ce officer, he started out as a private detective, founding his own agency at the age of 20.

He is believed to have worked extensivel­y undercover for Germany’s BND intelligen­ce service and the Bundeskrim­inalamt, the country’s national police CID. He claims to have also worked for various other Western intelligen­ce agencies, but the shadowy nature of the work makes the details impossible to confirm.

The case against him centres on various offshore accounts he allegedly holds in the Bahamas, Luxembourg and elsewhere. Proscutors say he failed to disclose the existence of the accounts to the German tax authoritie­s. His name has also been connected with various offshore shell companies listed in the “Panama Papers”.

Lawyers for Mauss have contended the accounts were set up by various intelligen­ce agencies and that he used the money for operations including hostage releases. If convicted, Mauss faces several years in prison.

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