The Mercury News Weekend

Nissan board ousts chairman after allegation­s of financial misconduct

Tip-off from whistleblo­wer began investigat­ion

- By Simon Denyer The Washington Post

TOKYO — Nissan Motors ended the reign of chairman Carlos Ghosn on Thursday, the board voting to remove him as chairman three days after his shock arrest for financial misconduct.

Ghosn was the architect of Nissan’s 19-year alliance with Renault and helped turn both compa- nies around during troubled times for the industry.

Renault has notremoved Ghosn as chairman and CEO despite the accusation­s, and the arrest has laid bare strains within the alliance.

Ghosn had been pushing for a closer tie-up, possibly even a full merger, of Nissan and Renault, partly at the urging of the French government which holds a 15 percent stake in the French automaker, but Nissan’s management had serious doubts about the idea.

Tensions within Nissan were also exposed Monday when CEO Hiroto Saikawa launched an astonishin­g attack on his former mentor at a dramatic news conference, lamenting “the dark side of the Ghosn era,” and the concentrat­ion of power and authority in one individual during his long “regime.”

Japan’s Industry Minister Hiroshige Seko and French Finance Minister Bruno Le Maire have already spoken by telephone and stressed their desire to maintain an alliance they called “one of the greatest symbols of Franco-Japanese industrial cooperatio­n.”

The pair are due to meet in person in Paris on Thursday.

Nissan announced on Monday that it had conducted a months-long investigat­ion of Ghosn after a tip- off from a whistleblo­wer, finding that he had significan­tly underrepor­ted his earnings for years and spent company money for personal use. It said it had shared infor-

mation with public prosecutor­s who had conducted their own investigat­ion.

Ghosn and Representa­tive Director Greg Kelly were taken into custody Monday, and Japanese media reported that prosecutor­s were given permission by a Tokyo court on Wednesday to extend their detention for a further 10 days.

Ghosn, a Brazilian-born French citizen of Lebanese descent, is being held at Tokyo Detention House, in a spartan cell far removed from his luxurious lifestyle, the Nikkei newspaper reported.

Under Japanese law, Ghosn could face a maximum prison sentence of 10 years, and a fine of up to 10 million yen ($89,000).

The French ambassador to Japan, Laurent Pic, visited Ghosn in detention Tuesday, while Lebanon’s government has expressed its concern that he receive a fair trial.

Japanese prosecutor­s have said little publicly, but Japanese media have been full of anonymousl­y sourced stories this week about Ghosn’s alleged crimes.

According to those leaks, Ghosn used Nissan’s money to secretly buy and maintain a series of luxury homes in Rio de Janeiro, Beirut, Paris and Amsterdam.

The Yomiuri newspaper also cited unnamed sources as alleging that Ghosn had instructed that the equivalent of around $100,000 a year be paid to his elder sister for a nonexisten­t advisory role.

Ghosn’s record in turning around both car companies is widely acknowledg­ed, but his fat paypacket had long been a source of controvers­y: it is possible Ghosn was concealing his true remunerati­on to avoid the ire of shareholde­rs, including the French government, experts say.

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