Google – AFP, Kyoko Hasegawa (AFP), 3 July 2013
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An Olympus
booth at a photo-imaging show in Yokohama on
January 31, 2013 (AFP/File,
Toshifumi Kitamura)
|
TOKYO — A
Japanese court handed suspended sentences to three former Olympus executives
accused of engineering a massive accounting fraud at the camera and medical
equipment maker.
Prosecutors
had asked that sacked company president Tsuyoshi Kikukawa be jailed for five
years and lesser terms given to ex-vice president Hisashi Mori and auditor
Hideo Yamada.
The
sentences from the Tokyo District Court, ranging from three-years for Kikukawa
and Yamada to two-and-a-half years for Mori, carry no immediate jail time.
A court
spokesman also confirmed that Olympus itself was fined 700 million yen ($6.9
million) for its role in the affair, which badly damaged Japan's corporate
governance image and turned the company's first foreign leader into a
high-profile whistleblower.
Prosecutors
had asked for a one-billion-yen fine against the company, which suffered
serious damage to its balance sheet in the wake of the crisis which made
headlines around the world.
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Then
Olympus president Tsuyoshi Kikukawa at
a press conference at the Tokyo Stock
Exchange
on October 14, 2011 (AFP/File, Yoshikazu Tsuno)
|
"The
accused Tsuyoshi Kikukawa and Hideo Yamada were both sentenced to three years
of imprisonment while the accused Hisashi Mori was sentenced to a jail term of
two and a half years," the court spokesman told AFP.
"Those
sentences will be suspended for five years and four years, respectively."
The men
were key figures in a complicated fraud to hide about $1.7 billion in losses
using outsized consulting fees and buying unrelated companies. The cover-up was
later exposed by Olympus's chief executive Michael Woodford in late 2011.
The Briton
was abruptly sacked after he raised concerns about the firm's accounting. The
company initially denied wrongdoing.
It later
admitted to the fraud and sacked Kikukawa and other executives as Japanese,
British and US authorities launched probes into the affair.
Olympus
subsequently agreed to a reported 10.0 million pound ($15 million) payout to
Woodford to settle a wrongful dismissal lawsuit.
The three
men had already pleaded guilty to charges they falsified the company's
financial results, with Kikukawa in September telling the court he would take
"full responsibility" for the crime.
The company
has already been fined about 192 million yen by Japan's Financial Services
Agency.
Separately,
Japanese authorities have ordered Olympus to pay about 5.0 billion yen in back
taxes and penalties related to the cover-up, local media have reported.
Indictments
have also been filed against three businessman who were arrested last month on
suspicion of illegally receiving money from Olympus in return for helping with
the cover-up.
Nobumasa
Yokoo, 59, a corporate executive, and his associates Taku Hada, 50, and Hiroshi
Ono, 51, face charges regarding the overseas transfer of 2.2 billion yen
received as a reward for instructing company executives how to conceal the
losses, Kyodo news agency said Monday.
Olympus
shares plunged in the wake of the scandal, losing about 75 percent of their
value as they slipped below 500 yen apiece.
The firm
announced a major corporate overhaul including a deal with Sony that saw the
pair establish a medical equipment joint venture.
The
business was launched after Sony said it would invest 50 billion yen in Olympus.
While it is better known by the public for its cameras, Olympus controls about
70 percent of the lucrative global market for medical endoscopes.
On
Wednesday, the Tokyo-listed stock closed at 3,170 yen, down 0.93 percent.



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