Probed German banker admits to secret Ecclestone deal
BERLIN |
BERLIN (Reuters) - Former BayernLB Chief Risk Officer Gerhard Gribkowsky admitted in court on Wednesday that he accepted bribes during the lender's 2006 sale of its Formula One stake.
"I allowed myself to be bribed," Gribkowsky told a regional court in Munich, admitting he had a secret agreement with Formula One supremo Bernie Ecclestone in 2005.
Gribkowsky, who has been charged with breach of trust and tax evasion, was arrested in January 2011 in relation to the sale of BayernLB's 48 percent stake in Formula One to U.K. investor CVC, earmarked by Ecclestone as a new shareholder.
The former BayernLB executive said he was paid 45 million euros ($57.2 million) in return and offered a job by Ecclestone. BayernLB had a stake in Formula One along with JP Morgan, Lehman Brothers and Ecclestone's family trust.
Gribkowsky's belated confession did not impress Judge Peter Noll who signalled a possible sentence of nine years in prison.
"It's by and large true," Gribkowsky said, commenting on the prosecutor's charges that he denied eight months earlier when the probe started.
(euro=$1.27)
(This story was refiled to correct spelling of name throughout to Gribkowsky, not Gribowsky)
(Reporting by Andreas Cremer; Editing by Maureen Bavdek)
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