TOKYO -- Japanese prosecutors arrested Carlos Ghosn for a fourth time following a raid early Thursday at his Tokyo residence, national broadcaster NHK reported, signaling a steep escalation of the legal problems facing the ousted auto executive still awaiting trial in Tokyo.
Prosecutors charged him with breach of trust in the last development, NHK said.
Ghosn has already been arrested on three previous charges, including one for breach of trust, and was free on bail awaiting trial on three indictments.
It was unclear if the former chairman of Renault, Nissan and Mitsubishi was taken into custody following the latest charge. NHK said prosecutors were likely to detain Ghosn again. Ghosn was released on bail March 6, following his arrest on Nov. 19. He spent 108 days in detention.
Prosecutors arrested Ghosn for breach of trust over a payment of 3.8 billion yen ($34.2 million) to an Oman sales representative, some of which is suspected of being used to help pay for a yacht for his personal use, NHK said and other Japanese media reported.
Ghosn has denied any wrongdoing. In a statement released after his arrest Thursday, Ghosn vowed he “would not be broken” and said he may have to postpone his plans for an April 11 news conference. “My arrest this morning is outrageous and arbitrary,” Ghosn said.
“It is part of another attempt by some individuals at Nissan to silence me by misleading the prosecutors. Why arrest me except to try to break me? I will not be broken,” he said.
“I was scheduled to present my story in a press conference next week; by arresting me again, the prosecutors have denied me that opportunity, for now, but I am determined that the truth will come out. I am confident that if tried fairly, I will be vindicated.”
A team of officials entered Ghosn's residence around 5:50 am in Toyko and asked him to go voluntarily to the prosecutor’s office, the report said.
Japanese media have reported that prosecutors were considering a new case against Ghosn, this time over payments Nissan allegedly made to a business partner in Oman.
The new probe targets results of an internal Nissan investigation that found Ghosn approved payments of around $35 million from Nissan to a distributor in Oman between 2011-18.
The disbursements went to Suhail Bahwan Automobiles, which is run by billionaire Suhail Bahwan, a friend of Ghosn's, according to someone familiar with the matter.
The company distributes Nissan vehicles in the region.
Nissan's probe found some evidence suggesting Suhail Bahwan Automobiles may have supported Ghosn's purchase of a yacht and helped finance a company owned by Ghosn's son.
Japanese media reports said that Ghosn paid Suhail Bahwan Automobiles out of his CEO Reserve, a special fund for ad hoc expenses. The disbursements were marked as marketing expenses, but prosecutors suspect they were channeled into personal use for such things as the purchase of a yacht and a 3 billion yen ($26.9 million) personal loan to Ghosn.
In a January jailhouse interview with Japan’s Nikkei, Ghosn said the CEO Reserve is “not a black box” and that other corporate officers signed off on the payments.
Reuters reported earlier this week that Renault had alerted French prosecutors after uncovering suspect payments to a Renault-Nissan business partner in Oman while Ghosn was CEO of the French automaker.
It quoted a Ghosn spokesman at the time as saying some $32 million were rewards for the Oman firm being a top Nissan dealer. Such dealer incentives were not directed by Ghosn and the funds were not used to pay any personal debt, the spokesman said.
Ghosn attorney Junichiro Hironaka said the night before Ghosn’s latest arrest that he had not discussed the Oman allegations with Ghosn. But he said Ghosn might be re-arrested and detained again.
“If the report proves to be true, Mr. Ghosn could be re-arrested and put into detention again,” Hironaka said.
The lawyer cautioned that the court has already ruled that Ghosn poses no risk of flight or evidence tampering, as evidenced by its decision to grant bail. Thus, Hironaka said, it is difficult to see what argument prosecutors could make for detaining him on new charges.
“If the prosecutors re-arrest and put him into detention, I’d say that would be a little too much,” Hironaka said. “I would have to question the validity of the prosecutors doing something like hostage justice again, as the court has already given him a release on bail, and this is not a separate case but related to the current case.”
Prosecutors have slapped Ghosn with three indictments, two for allegedly misreporting tens of millions of dollars in deferred compensation and a third concerning alleged breach of trust.
He faces up to 15 years in prison if found guilty.
In the first two indictments, Ghosn is charged with falsifying company financial filings to hide some $80 million in deferred compensation.
Ghosn's breach-of-trust charge allege that he temporarily shifted 1.85 billion yen ($16.5 million) in personal swap contract losses to Nissan and had Nissan pay $14.7 million out of the CEO Reserve to a business associate who allegedly helped Ghosn clear the red ink.
Nissan plans to hold an extraordinary shareholder meeting on April 8 to remove from the automaker's board Ghosn and Greg Kelly, the American director who was indicted as his alleged conspirator.
Ghosn was removed as chairman shortly after his arrest, and both men were stripped of their roles as representative directors, with special rights to sign financial agreements on behalf of the company. But only shareholders can vote them off the board.