Business Day

Germans ‘indicted Jooste’ on rap of false accounting

- Karin Matussek and John Bowker

Former Steinhoff Internatio­nal CEO Markus Jooste is among four people being charged in Germany for accounting crimes, a person familiar with the investigat­ion said.

The case was filed about four months ago, according to the person, who declined to be identified discussing private matters. Prosecutor­s in the German city of Oldenburg confirmed in a statement on Thursday they had indicted three former executives and another manager over false accounting. No names were disclosed.

Fake proceeds from bogus transactio­ns were booked at some of the group’s units, according to the statement. The fake deals made it seem that assets were sold to third parties while they were in fact acquired by other companies close to the group, it said.

In an interview on Thursday, Jooste’s German lawyer called the allegation­s inaccurate.

The bogus transactio­ns were allegedly used to manipulate balance sheets by more than €1.5bn. Additional­ly, the value of real-estate assets was inflated by €820m, prosecutor­s said. The charges cover a period from July 2011 to January 2015.

Thursday’s charges are the first in the criminal cases over the scandal that brought the retailer, based in SA and listed in Frankfurt, to the brink of collapse. Deloitte refused to sign off on the company’s financial statements in 2017, triggering a dramatic share-price collapse.

Jooste resigned the same day, and has since been named by the company as central to a web of fraudulent transactio­ns that artificial­ly inflated profit and asset values over several years. He has denied the allegation­s.

IN AN INTERVIEW ON THURSDAY, JOOSTE’S GERMAN LAWYER CALLED THE ALLEGATION­S [IN A STATEMENT] INACCURATE

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