Former Olympus chairman, six others arrested in Japan
16 Feb 2012
Seven persons, including the former chairman of scam-hit Olympus Corporation, and three other executives, were arrested in Japan on Thursday for their role in the $1.7 billion accounting fraud, which unravelled last year.
Tsuyoshi Kikukawa, the former chairman, resigned late last year after Briton Michael Woodford, a former CEO, blew the whistle on the scam in the Japanese company. Woodford was sacked in October, days after he raised questions about irregular payments made to shady intermediaries by Olympus while acquiring overseas firms.
The 71-year-old Kikukawa was named as the mastermind in the fraud that aimed to move $1.7 billion worth of losses on Olympus' balance-sheet to present a rosy picture about the company to shareholders.
The Tokyo district public prosecutor's office announced that along with Kikukawa three other former Olympus executives had been arrested: former vice-president Hisashi Mori, former auditor Hideo Yamada, and former brokerage executive Akio Nakagawa. Three executives of an investment fund were also arrested on Thursday.
Olympus, which is facing a probe by regulators and law enforcement agencies in Japan, the UK and the US, is also facing shareholder lawsuits. Its share value has lost more than 50 per cent since the accounting fraud was revealed.
The former chairman and the other executives began falsifying the accounts in the 1990s following hefty investment losses suffered during the Japanese stock market crash. They allegedly began inflating the cost of overseas acquisitions, hoping to square up the accounts much later.