Indicted for misuse of corporate assets and abuse of power, Arnaud Lagardère leaves his post as CEO

by time news

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Lifestyle

Arnaud Lagardère, 63, was indicted on Monday following a day of interrogation by financial investigating judges. He was heard in a judicial investigation opened by the National Financial Prosecutor’s Office (PNF) in April 2021 on the basis of a complaint from the Amber Capital fund, a report from the Financial Markets Authority (AMF), as well as a report from the High Council of Auditors (H3C, now the High Audit Authority, H2A), according to a judicial source. The acts were allegedly committed between April 2009 and December 2022.

Arnaud Lagardère is suspected of having “financed his lifestyle and personal expenses by drawing on the funds of the Lagardère SAS and Lagardère companies” (LCM), detailed the judicial source. For several years, these companies “would have notably taken charge of expenses linked to the buildings he occupies, as well as an inheritance debt and numerous current account advances,” she added. The group, for its part, assured Tuesday that “this indictment essentially concerns facts concerning personal companies belonging entirely to it and not involving any company in the Lagardère group.”

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Dismantling

“With regard to Lagardère SA, the indictment of Mr. Arnaud Lagardère concerns only facts dating from 2018 and 2019, qualified as vote buying, abuse of power and dissemination of false or misleading information, facts which he strongly contests,” the group said. This legal episode is the latest in a long series which has seen the Lagardère heir lose his aura and over the years close down the group founded in 1992 by his father Jean-Luc. This empire was the result of the merger between the aircraft manufacturer Matra and the publisher Hachette.

Read also: Arnaud Lagardère, a boss of the France of the past

In the decade following the death of Jean-Luc Lagardère, his son fell into debt, sold the EADS aerospace branch and sold several media outlets. In 2021, he renounced share sponsorship, a status created by his father which allowed them both successively to manage the Lagardère group with less than 10% of the capital, thus precipitating the dismantling of the family empire, holder of ‘a very profitable network of shops in train stations and airports (Relay brands, Duty Free stores), famous performance halls (Casino de Paris, Folies Bergère, etc.), media (Europe 1, Le Journal du Dimanche, etc.), or again from the French number one in publishing, Hachette Livres.

A dismantling completed in November by the takeover of Vivendi. “We are now part of the Vivendi family. If I may say this personal word, we are joining the Bolloré family, which I find even more flattering,” said Arnaud Lagardère on April 25 during the annual general meeting of his group.

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