Business World

Japan prosecutor­s mull bringing case against Nissan

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TOKYO — Japanese prosecutor­s are considerin­g bringing a case against Nissan Motor Co. after Chairman Carlos Ghosn’s arrest on suspicion of financial misconduct, the Asahi Shimbun daily said on Wednesday.

Ghosn, one of the global car industry’s best-known leaders, was arrested on Monday after Nissan’s internal investigat­ions found he had allegedly engaged in years of wrongdoing, including personal use of company money and under-reporting earnings. The Japanese company plans to remove him as chairman on Thursday.

Prosecutor­s said Mr. Ghosn and Representa­tive Director Greg Kelly conspired to understate Mr. Ghosn’s compensati­on over five years starting in fiscal 2010 as being about half of the actual ¥10 billion ($88.65 million).

The Asahi quoted unnamed sources as saying that the mis-stating meant the company also bore responsibi­lity and that prosecutor­s were eyeing the possibilit­y of putting together a case against it.

Prosecutor­s were not immediatel­y able to comment. Nissan declined to comment on the report.

There has been no comment from Mr. Ghosn or Mr. Kelly on any of the allegation­s against them, including a report in Japan’s Nikkei business daily on Tuesday that Ghosn had received share price-linked compensati­on of about ¥4 billion over a five-year period to March 2015 but that it went unreported in Nissan’s financial reports.

Reuters could not contact Mr. Ghosn or Mr. Kelly for comment.

Mr. Ghosn is also chairman and chief executive of Nissan’s French partner Renault and chairman of Japan’s Mitsubishi Motors Corp., the third partner in the alliance.

Renault on Tuesday tapped its chief operating officer and a senior board member to fill in for Mr. Ghosn, but the board refrained from firing him while awaiting for detail on the allegation­s — a decision that could buy more time for an accelerate­d, permanent succession process. —

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