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PRIVACY
Enterprise

Nissan agrees to pay $15million to regulators to settle fraud charges

Ghosn is awaiting trial in Japan on financial misconduct allegations in a criminal case

Nissan has agreed to pay 15 million dollars (£12 million) and ex-chairman Carlos Ghosn is paying a million dollars (£800,000) to settle US regulators' civil fraud charges of hiding from investors more than 140 million dollars (£113 million) in compensation and retirement benefits for Ghosn.

The Securities and Exchange Commission announced the settlement with the major Japanese car maker and its former chairman, who also agreed to be barred for 10 years from serving as an officer or director of a public company.

Ghosn is awaiting trial in Japan on financial misconduct allegations in a criminal case.

The 65-year-old, who led Nissan for two decades, was arrested by Japanese authorities in Tokyo and jailed in November. He has maintained he is innocent.

He is currently out on bail but faces restrictions on his activities such as not being allowed to contact his wife Carole. She has appeared before a Japanese judge to answer questions in the case. The first hearing in the trial has been set for April.

Ghosn and Nissan settled the charges without admitting or denying the SEC's allegations, but agreed to refrain from future anti-fraud violations.

Former Nissan director Greg Kelly, agreed to pay a 100,000 dollar (£80,000) penalty to settle the SEC charges, to be barred for five years from serving as an officer or director of a public company, and to be suspended for five years from practising as a lawyer before the SEC.

In a statement, Ghosn's lawyers noted that he will be allowed to contest and deny the allegations in the criminal case in Japan, and he "fully intends to do so".