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Japan trial of alleged Ghosn escape accomplices set for June

This undated combination of photos courtesy Rudy Michael Taylor shows his father, former US special forces member Michael Taylor and his brother Peter, posing together years apart. A US father-son pair accused of helping former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn in his audacious escape from Japan arrived in Tokyo on March 2, 2021 (AFP)
This undated combination of photos courtesy Rudy Michael Taylor shows his father, former US special forces member Michael Taylor and his brother Peter, posing together years apart. A US father-son pair accused of helping former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn in his audacious escape from Japan arrived in Tokyo on March 2, 2021 (AFP)
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28 Apr 2021 03:04:59 GMT9
28 Apr 2021 03:04:59 GMT9

TOKYO: Two Americans accused of helping former Nissan chief Carlos Ghosn jump bail and flee Japan will go on trial in Tokyo from June, the Tokyo District Court confirmed Wednesday.

Former US Army Green Beret Michael Taylor, 60, and his son Peter will have their first hearing on June 14, a court spokesman told AFP. They face up to three years in prison.

The Americans, along with a Lebanese national still at large, are suspected of orchestrating the astonishing escape of the disgraced business tycoon, including putting him inside an audio-equipment case to get him onto a private jet, in December 2019.

The two men were brought to Japan in early March after the US Supreme Court rejected their fight against extradition, during which they had claimed they would face torture-like conditions if handed to Japanese authorities.

Ghosn remains at large in Lebanon, which does not have an extradition treaty with Tokyo.

Ghosn was a global business superstar and head of an auto alliance joining Nissan, Renault and Mitsubishi Motors before his career came crashing to an abrupt end in November 2018, when Tokyo investigators stormed his private jet to arrest him.

The French-Lebanese-Brazilian national was eventually charged with four counts of financial misconduct over claims he hid compensation and misused Nissan funds.

Having spent months in detention, Ghosn was out on bail awaiting trial on the charges — which he denies — when he fled the country in what Japanese prosecutors termed “one of the most brazen and well-orchestrated escape acts in recent history”.

Ghosn’s former aide at Nissan, Greg Kelly, is currently also on trial in Tokyo for his alleged role in underreporting Ghosn’s income.

AFP

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