Updates to our Terms of Use

We are updating our Terms of Use. Please carefully review the updated Terms before proceeding to our website.

Thursday, April 18, 2024 | Back issues
Courthouse News Service Courthouse News Service

Russia Oligarch Questioned by Spanish Criminal Court   

One of Russia's most powerful tycoons, Mikhail Fridman, appeared in Spain's top criminal court for questioning Monday on allegations he artificially depressed the value of a Spanish takeover target.

MADRID (AFP) — One of Russia's most powerful tycoons, Mikhail Fridman, appeared in Spain's top criminal court for questioning Monday on allegations he artificially depressed the value of a Spanish takeover target.

Fridman, who has Russian, Ukrainian and Israeli nationality, is suspected of secretly working to engineer the collapse of Spanish digital entertainment firm Zed Worldwide to take it over after the company declared bankruptcy.

Spanish prosecutors accuse him of market manipulation, fraudulent insolvency, business corruption and misuse of company assets.

Spain's National Court summoned Fridman to appear for questioning at a pretrial hearing in Madrid as a person under investigation.

In May, Fridman's Luxembourg-based investment company LetterOne secured majority control of struggling Spanish supermarket chain Dia via a hostile after following a bitter dispute with its management.

Through LetterOne, Fridman also controls interests in telecoms, banking, oil and healthcare.

The tycoon, who is close to the Kremlin, was listed by Forbes this year as London's richest resident, is one of the founders of Alfa Bank, Russia's largest privately held lender.

Spanish prosecutors accuse Fridman of being behind "a series of actions which brought about the insolvency of Spanish firm Zed Worldwide ... in order to acquire it at a derisory price, far lower than its market value."

In a court filing, they described the alleged attack on Zed Worldwide as a "raid" using techniques "typically used by the Russian mafia" to illegally take over a firm.

Lead prosecutor Jose Grinda told Agence France-Presse the technique involved using legal and financial means to economically "strangle the company until it goes bankrupt."

Founded in 1998 in Madrid, Zed Worldwide developed and sold valued-added services for mobile telephone operators. It made a fortune with premium SMS services and Commandos, a real-time military tactics video game.

Fridman became one of the company's main shareholders and one of its main creditors.

Then in 2014, telecoms firm Vimpelcom, also controlled by Fridman, abruptly canceled or changed its contracts with one of Zed Worldwide's Russian subsidiaries, depriving it of significant revenue, prosecutors say.

Those contracts had boosted Zed's revenue to such an extent that it planned to list on Nasdaq, securing a 140-million-euro ($157-million) loan in 2013, some of which came from a bank controlled by Fridman, prosecutors say.

They claim Fridman and Vimpelcom, now known as Veon, "knew it would be impossible (for Zed) to honor this loan if there was a significant reduction in revenue from the Russian market."

As a result, Zed Worldwide filed for bankruptcy protection in June 2016, and four months later, entrepreneurs close to Fridman made a 20-million-euro purchase offer, which was "much less than its value when the obstructions began," they say.

In a document sent to the court, Fridman's lawyers said their client "is not nor has ever been a director neither legally nor in fact" of the companies accused of deliberately driving down Zed's market value.

But prosecutors argued in their submission that Fridman "hides his control of criminal activities behind subordinates."

Investigators have analyzed "a series of WhatsApps and emails that show that Fridman was aware of everything that was happening," Grinda told AFP.

The case was opened when Zed founder Javier Perez Dolset filed a criminal complaint alleging there was a strategy to seize his company.

But he himself ended up being indicted on separate charges of fraud, a fact which Fridman has pounced on, accusing Dolset of making up "a conspiracy theory."

© Agence France-Presse

Categories / Business, Criminal, International, Securities

Subscribe to Closing Arguments

Sign up for new weekly newsletter Closing Arguments to get the latest about ongoing trials, major litigation and hot cases and rulings in courthouses around the U.S. and the world.

Loading...