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Olympus ex-chairman Kikukawa arrested over accounts: report

Former Olympus Corp. Chairman Tsuyoshi Kikukawa was arrested by Japanese prosecutors investigating his part in a $1.7 billion accounting fraud, Kyodo News reported, without citing anyone.

The Japanese camera maker is facing shareholder lawsuits and may be subject to further criminal investigation after admitting to a 13-year cover-up. The company restated past securities reports and took a $1.3 billion reduction in net assets in December.

Olympus’ Tokyo headquarters and its affiliated offices were raided Dec. 21 by prosecutors after the company said in November that Kikukawa and two other executives colluded to hide losses from securities investments from the 1990s. The stock has plunged by 48 percent since the Oct. 14 dismissal of its first non-Japanese president, Michael Woodford, who later publicly questioned inflated takeover costs. 
Tsuyoshi Kikukawa
Tsuyoshi Kikukawa

Kikukawa, 71, stepped down last year after Woodford’s revelations. Hideo Yamada, 67, who led Olympus’s investment unit since the 1980s and later became an auditing officer, and former Executive Vice President Hisashi Mori also were asked to report for questioning, the Yomiuri newspaper reported, without citing anyone.

Olympus will cooperate fully with prosecutors, Olympus said in an e-mailed statement today. Yoshiaki Yamada, a Tokyo-based spokesman for Olympus, wasn’t immediately available for comment.

Founded in 1919 as a microscope and thermometer business, Olympus produced its first camera in 1936 and a predecessor to the modern-day endoscope in 1950, according to its website. Olympus now controls 75 percent of the global market for endoscopes, instruments doctors use to look inside the body cavity to help detect disease.

In 1987, President Toshiro Shimoyama announced a strategy to strengthen the company’s investments after operating profit fell by half due to the yen’s gain, according to a panel report disclosed in December. Investment losses began to swell after the Japanese stock market crashed in 1989 and reached about 100 billion yen in 1998, when Yamada and Mori resorted to financial trickery to hide them, the report said.

The company inflated takeover costs of London-listed Gyrus Group Plc and three Japanese companies with the intention of boosting goodwill, according to the Dec. 6 panel report. Yamada and Mori planned to write down the goodwill over years to cancel out losses that were kept off Olympus’s balance sheet.

Olympus in January sued 19 current and former executives, including current President Shuichi Takayama and five corporate auditors, over their roles in concealing losses. The company formed panels to reform management and nominate a new board. 

(Bloomberg)
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