|
Parmalat’s Founder and Bankers Are Charged
MILAN,
-- A judge in Parma charged the founder of Parmalat
and two powerful Italian bankers on Wednesday with playing key roles
in the collapse of the dairy giant, which resulted in the largest
corporate bankruptcy ever in Europe, The New York Times
reported.
The judge, Domenico Truppa, indicted Cesare Geronzi,
the chairman of the powerful investment bank Mediobanca, with fraudulent
bankruptcy. Matteo Arpe, the former chief executive of the Rome-based
bank Capitalia, who is considered one of the rising stars of the
Italian financial world, was also charged with failing to act to
stop the fraud that led to the spectacular implosion of Parmalat
in 2003, the paper reported.
Geronzi and Arpe could not be reached for comment
by the paper, but Capitalia in a statement said Geronzi was innocent.
The charges
Wednesday contend that Geronzi and other Capitalia executives forced
Parmalat to buy an unlisted bottled water company, Ciappazzi, for
more than the market value to get access to credit for the Tanzi
family’s tourism business, which was run by his daughter,
the paper reported.
-- NYSSCPA.org
News Staff
Posted on
7/26/07 |