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F1 Boss Ecclestone Goes On Trial For Bribery In Munich

F1 Boss Ecclestone Goes On Trial For Bribery In Munich

24.04.2014 11:21

Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has gone on trial in Munich facing charges of bribery. The high-profile case threatens the Briton's longtime dominance in one of the world's most-profitable sports. Ecclestone talked and smiled with his lawyers as he arrived in the courtroom in Munich on Thursday. The.

Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has gone on trial in Munich facing charges of bribery. The high-profile case threatens the Briton's longtime dominance in one of the world's most-profitable sports.

Ecclestone talked and smiled with his lawyers as he arrived in the courtroom in Munich on Thursday. The 83-year-old is accused of paying $44 million (31.8 million euros) in 2006 to a German banker to ensure the F1 business was sold to the motor sport supremo's preferred buyer.



Ecclestone, who once again is thrust into the spotlight of controversy, denies any wrongdoing and says he will fight to clear his name.



"I'm going into this trial to prove my innocence of what I have been charged with," he said.



Bribery allegations



At the center of the trial is the question of why Ecclestone paid German banker Gerhard Gribkowsky millions. Ecclestone says he was blackmailed, while the Gribkowsky says he was bribed.



In 2006, CVC Capital Partners paid around $830 million to buy a 47 percent stake in F1 held by German bank BayernLB. Ecclestone received a $66 million commission from Gribkowsky for the deal, and then allegedly gave $44 million of it back to the German banker.



Prosecutors suspect the payment was a bribe to ensure CVC and not another rival bidder took control of the stake. They claim Ecclestone favored CVC because it was retaining him as chief executive.



The F1 boss has said he paid $10 million to Gribkowsky, the former chief risk officer at BayernLB, but that was only because the German was threatening to make false claims about his tax affairs.



Gribkowsky was sentenced in 2012 to eight-and-a-half years in prison for bribe-taking in a trial that included testimony from Ecclestone. That same judge who convicted Gribkowsky, Peter Noll, is now presiding over Ecclestone's trial. Gribkowsky, meanwhile, is set to testify in Ecclestone's trial.



F1 supremo



The Briton could face up to 10 years in jail if found guilty. Ecclestone is due to be in court for two days per week during the trial, with 26 days of hearings initially scheduled and a final verdict not expected before mid-September. The proceedings' part time schedule is designed to allow him to attend F1 races.



During a civil case in London last year, Ecclestone successfully defended a separate $100 million damages claim over accusations he undervalued F1 when it was sold to CVC.



Ecclestone, a former used car salesman, first entered the world auto racing stage as a failed driver in the 1950s and later team owner in 1972. The controversial businessman helped to transform F1 into one of the world's biggest entertainment franchises after acquiring the global television rights for the sport in the 1970s.



dr/hc (AFP, dpa, Reuters)



 
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