Bangkok Post

A year after his arrest, Carlos Ghosn remains stuck in Tokyo under stringent bail terms.

- NAOMI TAJITSU TIM KELLY

TOKYO: A year after his arrest, former Nissan Motor Corp chairman Carlos Ghosn remains stuck in Tokyo under stringent bail conditions and without a trial date as he seeks access to a trove of Nissan e-mails and other evidence to fight charges of financial misconduct.

His lawyers have asked a court to grant access to 6,000 pieces of evidence collected from Nissan such as electronic communicat­ions, which they say is crucial for a fair trial, showed an Oct 4 court filing seen by Reuters.

The once-feted executive has spent 129 days in detention since his arrest shortly after his private jet touched down at a Tokyo airport on Nov 19, 2018.

He faces four charges — which he denies — including hiding income and enriching himself through payments to dealership­s in the Middle East.

Nissan sacked Ghosn, saying its internal investigat­ions revealed misconduct ranging from understati­ng his salary while he was its chief executive officer, and transferri­ng $5 million of Nissan funds to an account in which he had an interest.

An earlier court ruling allowed prosecutor­s to hand back evidence to Nissan during pretrial wrangling over witnesses and evidence similar to the US discovery process.

“If prosecutor­s are given the freedom to unilateral­ly delete the collected evidence and return it to relevant parties, this is equivalent to granting the investigat­ive agencies the right to destroy evidence,” showed the filing to the Tokyo District Court.

The lawyers also asked the court to rescind the earlier ruling, saying some evidence could be erased by Nissan to protect confidenti­al business informatio­n.

They argued the “ruling deprives Mr Ghosn of his right to receive a fair public trial by an impartial court”, as it enabled prosecutor­s to view and use the evidence and withhold it from the defence.

Prosecutor­s are not required to hand over all evidence they or the police gather during investigat­ions unless ordered by the court, unlike in the US discovery process where prosecutor­s and defence lawyers disclose the evidence they intend to present in court.

A spokeswoma­n for the Tokyo prosecutor­s’ office said the office could not comment on individual cases. A Nissan spokeswoma­n declined to comment.

Ghosn’s lawyers have also asked the court to dismiss all charges against him, accusing prosecutor­s of colluding with government officials and Nissan executives to oust him to block any takeover of the automaker by French alliance partner Renault SA, of which Ghosn was also chairman.

“Tokyo prosecutor­s have repeatedly and systematic­ally denied Mr Ghosn fundamenta­l rights of due process and turned the presumptio­n of innocence on its head,” Ghosn’s legal team said in a statement to mark the anniversar­y of his arrest.

As well as a defence team of four attorneys in Japan led by Junichiro Hironaka, known as the Razor, Ghosn hired nine other lawyers in Europe and the United States to help prepare for a trial they estimate may not start until April at the earliest.

In Japan, suspects who deny charges brought against them are often detained for long periods and subject to intense questionin­g without a lawyer present, a system some observers have criticised as “hostage justice”.

Japan’s prosecutor­s have repeatedly dismissed that criticism, saying Ghosn has been treated well and in accordance with the law.

 ?? KYODO NEWS VIA AP ?? In this photo taken on May 23, 2019, Carlos Ghosn, left, accompanie­d by his lawyer Junichiro Hironaka, arrives at Tokyo District Court for a pre-trial meeting in Tokyo.
KYODO NEWS VIA AP In this photo taken on May 23, 2019, Carlos Ghosn, left, accompanie­d by his lawyer Junichiro Hironaka, arrives at Tokyo District Court for a pre-trial meeting in Tokyo.

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