Wirecard key witness confirms the charge: business invented

Oliver Bellenhaus on a trial day in December

The only goal was to deceive Wirecard’s auditors.

(Photo: dpa)

Munich In the Munich Wirecard trial, the key witness for the public prosecutor’s office comprehensively confirmed the central allegation of the prosecution: The alleged billions in sales of the Dax group, which collapsed in 2020, with “third-party partners” in the Middle East and Asia were therefore fictitious.

The former Wirecard manager Oliver Bellenhaus described in detail the falsification of business contracts and sales on Wednesday. “Of course we came up with that,” said Bellenhaus on the sixth day of the trial about the billion-euro bookings on trust accounts in Southeast Asia.

When the court asked explicitly whether the third-party business existed, Bellenhaus said: “I answer very clearly: no.” The payment service provider had filed for bankruptcy in the summer of 2020 because the 1.9 billion euros allegedly booked in the escrow accounts could not be found. The “third-party partners” were companies that allegedly processed credit card payments on behalf of Wirecard in countries where the Bavarian group itself did not have a corresponding license.

The only goal was to deceive the auditors. “The auditor needed something, and then the panic ensued,” said Bellenhaus. “It was huge chaos, it was all chaos.” CEO Markus Braun never asked when he signed fake contracts.

Top jobs of the day

Find the best jobs now and
be notified by email.

According to the indictment, Braun, Bellenhaus and the former head of accounting have falsified Wirecard’s balance sheets since 2015 and damaged lending banks by 3.1 billion euros. According to Bellenhaus, former sales director Jan Marsalek, who has been in hiding since 2020, the chief accountant and himself were directly involved in the falsification of contracts, documents and sales data.

What role did Wirecard boss Braun play?

It is not yet clear what role Braun played in the process, which was scheduled to last more than 100 days. The ex-CEO has denied the allegations against his defense attorneys and sees himself as a victim of the scammers at his company. In the process, the Austrian manager is due to testify for the first time next week.

>> Read more: “Money, power and young chicks” – This is how Wirecard’s key witness ticks

According to the indictment, a gang was at work at Wirecard that systematically cheated banks and investors. A conviction of Braun as a gang leader or member would require that the CEO personally controlled the fraud or actively participated.

According to Bellenhaus’ description, there was silence in the company about the criminal nature of the business: “No one ever spoke to me (about the fraud).” The realization that the third-party business was invented only came to him over the years. “That’s how it turned out.” Bellenhaus therefore hoped for a return to legality, instead, according to his statement, the phantom deals were getting bigger and bigger: “At some point you lost control, it was just too late.”

As a “money-burning machine”, Wirecard has been making losses since 2013 because the company was no longer able to cover the rapidly increasing costs. “Millions went out, you can’t count it that quickly.”

More: Key witness Oliver Bellenhaus calls the group “cancer”

source site-15