Patrick
Whelan and William McAteer convicted in Dublin court of illegally lending to
Maple 10 group of investors
The Guardian, Henry McDonald in Dublin, Thursday 17 April 2014
Patrick Whelan outside court. He was found gulity of illgeal lending. Photograph: Niall Carson/PA |
Two former
Anglo Irish Bank executives have been found guilty of handing out illegal loans
from the financial institution whose reckless lending almost bankrupted
Ireland.
Patrick
Whelan and William McAteer were convicted in a Dublin court of illegally
lending to the Maple 10 group of investors in the summer of 2008, in order to
prop up the Anglo Irish share price and save the bank from collapse.
The
10-week-long trial of the directors transfixed a nation that had been forced to
pay out more than €30bn (£25bn) in taxpayers' money to rescue the business.
It was the
first time that any bankers faced charges under Section 60 of the Irish
Republic's Companies Act, which bars banks from giving out loans to bolster
their share price.
However the
pair were found not guilty of orchestrating illegal loans from the bank to the
family of Seán Quinn, Ireland's one-time richest man.
William McAteer leaves court after the verdicts. |
Whelan, 52,
the former head of lending in Ireland for Anglo Irish Bank, and McAteer, 63,
its former chief risk and finance officer, could face up to five years in jail
on each count.
The jury
took nearly 17 hours to decide the fate of Whelan and McAteer as well as Seán
FitzPatrick, former Anglo Irish chairman, whom they found not guilty on
Wednesday.
The guilty
verdicts for Whelan and McAteer were unanimous. Outside court the two men
refused to talk to the media.
The judge
had previously directed that 65-year-old FitzPatrick be found not guilty in
connection with loans to Quinn, because of a lack of evidence. He also cleared
Whelan of seven counts relating to the amendment of loan facility letters sent
to the so-called Maple 10, a group of rich Irish investors allegedly used to
buy out the Quinn family's shares in the bank.
Quinn and
his family's legal battle with the Irish state over the collapse of Anglo Irish
sustained a blow after the jury decided the loans given to them were legal.
The Quinns
are engaged in a civil action against the state which rests on the supposed
illegality of the loans from Anglo Irish.
The trial
focused on moves by the bank to unravel Quinn's secret holding in the
institution, built up via financial instruments called contracts for difference
– or highly leveraged bets on an increase in the Anglo Irish share price.
By July
2008, with financial ruin looming for Anglo Irish Bank owing to excessive
lending in the Irish property boom, Quinn controlled about 28% of the shares in
the ailing bank.
The Maple
10 investors were lent a total of €450m by Anglo to buy about 10% of the shares
that Quinn controlled. Quinn's wife and five children were also lent €169m to
buy nearly 15% of the stock.
In February
prosecutors said that executives at the bank decided to do something
"absolutely illegal" by lending money to the individuals.
FitzPatrick,
who was chief executive of the bank from 1986 to 2005, said his successor,
David Drumm, told him the plan to lend the money was "kosher and above
board", according to interview notes that police read out during the
trial.
FitzPatrick's
legal team had persuaded the jury that he was kept in the dark as to the
identities of the Maple 10 investors and consequently would not have known the
loans were illegal transactions.
The case
was one of the most complex in European financial criminal history and lasted
43 days. More than 600 documents were read into the book of evidence and 54
witnesses were called during the trial in court number 19 of Dublin's circuit
criminal court.
Attention
will now turn to whether the Irish government will hold a public inquiry into
the Anglo Irish scandal. In 2010 the state was ultimately forced to seek a
€67.5bn bailout from the International Monetary Fund, the European commission
and European Central Bank, which it exited last year.
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