German police arrest ex-head of Wirecard’s most profitable unit

Police arrest former head of Wirecard’s most profitable unit as probe into company’s collapse and Germany’s biggest financial fraud continues

  • German authorities have made a new arrest relating to collapse of Wirecard  
  • German media have identified the suspect as Oliver Bellenhaus 
  • Bellenhaus ran the company’s most profitable unit before scandal was exposed 

German prosecutors said Monday they have made a new arrest related to the spectacular collapse of payments provider Wirecard, which is shaping up to be the country’s biggest financial fraud scandal.

The managing director of Cardsystems Middle East FZ-LLC, a Dubai-based subsidiary of Wirecard, was placed under arrest on suspicion of serious fraud, said prosecutors.

The suspect was not named by authorities, but German media have identified him as Oliver Bellenhaus, who ran the German company’s most profitable unit before the scandal was exposed.

German prosecutors said Monday they have made a new arrest related to the spectacular collapse of payments provider Wirecard. Above, Wirecard headquarters in Aschheim, Germany

Prosecutors said reasons for keeping the suspect in custody include ‘flight risk and risk of evidence suppression’.

Wirecard shocked Germany’s financial world when it admitted last month that 1.9 billion euros missing from its accounts likely did not exist.

German Finance Minister Olaf Scholz has called it an ‘unparalleled scandal’, saying it underlined the need for greater oversight and over such financial firms.

Wirecard’s chief executive Markus Braun was arrested on suspicion of falsifying accounts before being released on bail.

The company has since filed for bankruptcy.

Allegations had dogged Wirecard for months, but the financial technology company was able to repeatedly fend off claims.

Wirecard chief exec Markus Braunwas forced to resign after auditor EY refused to sign off the payment systems provider's 2019 accounts

Wirecard chief exec Markus Braunwas forced to resign after auditor EY refused to sign off the payment systems provider’s 2019 accounts

German authorities even launched investigations against a journalist over the negative reports.

But the scam unravelled in June when auditors Ernst & Young said they were unable to find 1.9 billion euros of cash in the company’s accounts.

The missing cash makes up a quarter of the balance sheet.

The sum was supposedly held to cover risks in trading carried out by third parties on Wirecard’s behalf and was meant to be sitting in trustee accounts at two Philippine banks.

But the Philippines’ central bank has said the cash never entered its monetary system and both Asian banks, BDO and BPI, denied having a relationship with Wirecard.

The company, which employs nearly 6,000 people, was forced to admit that the funds likely ‘do not exist’.

The group’s former CEO Braun, an Austrian computer scientist, subsequently turned himself in before being bailed for five million euros the following day.

Another high-ranking Wirecard former executive, Jan Marsalek, has so far failed to turn himself in to Munich investigators despite a reported earlier promise to do so.