The Scotsman

Court is told Anglo Irish cast net wide in shares plan bid

- Ed CarTy IN DUBLIN

Anglo Irish Bank chased clients to the south of France and Portugal in an €800 million (£660m) deal to unwind secret share investment­s built up by former billionair­e Sean Quinn, a court has been told.

At the opening of a trial in Dublin of three ex-bankers for the alleged unlawful provision of loans for the purchase of shares in 2008, a jury heard investors were sought out in the US, the Middle East and the holiday destinatio­ns of nice and Faro.

Sean FitzPatric­k, 65, the former chairman and one-time chief executive of Anglo, former chief risk officer Willie McAteer, 63, and former managing director of lending Pat Whelan, 51, face a total of 16 charges each in relation to the lending.

They pleaded not guilty to providing unlawful financial assistance to individual­s in July 2008 for the purchase of shares in the bank. Whelan faces a further seven charges of being privy to the fraudulent alteration of loan facility letters to seven individual­s. He pleaded not guilty.

Dublin Circuit Criminal Court was told that Anglo created a plan to lend money to the Quinn family and a so-called “Maple Ten” of high net worth clients, mostly developers and including Belfast-born businessma­n Paddy McKillen, to buy up the secret Quinn shareholdi­ng.

Paul o’Higgins, senior counsel for the state, revealed the original plan to unwind the position was thought to cost €800m but as the share price fell it ultimately involved €450m being loaned for the Maple Ten and €175m for the Quinn family.

The prosecutio­n lawyer said one borrower was in the South of France when he was chased down by former chief executive David Drumm – who is not on trial – and Whelan.

Unsuccessf­ul attempts

were made to get investment from the US and at a roadshow in the Middle East, where Anglo tried to line up sovereign states to invest.

The court heard the enormous lending was designed to let investors buy the Quinn holding – 25 per cent of the bank’s share value. The former business tycoon Mr Quinn built it up in undisclose­d stock market deals.

Mr o’Higgins told the court that the true extent of Mr Quinn’s holding became apparent when he met Mr Drumm and FitzPatric­k at a hotel in navan, Co Meath, in September 2007.

The prosecutio­n claims the loans were arranged between 8 and 30 July 2008, months before the bank was nationalis­ed.

The court was told each member of the Maple Ten was due to get €60m but that fell to €45m as the share price dropped. They were only liable for 25 per cent of the value of the loan.

The trial is expected until the end of May.

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 ?? Picture: Reuters ?? The forward section of the Luno sits on the beach at anglet while the stern and midships are grounded on a jetty
Picture: Reuters The forward section of the Luno sits on the beach at anglet while the stern and midships are grounded on a jetty

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