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Former F1 boss in London court for fraud

Former Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has appeared in a London court on charges of fraud.

Former Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has appeared in a London court on charges of fraud. Photo: AP

Former Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone has denied fraud over an alleged failure to declare £400 million of overseas assets to the British government.

Ecclestone, 91, is accused of failing to declare a trust in Singapore with a bank account containing about  $A946 million.

He was met at Westminster Magistrates’ Court on Monday morning by photographers and camera operators who had been warned by court security not to mob him because of his age.

His white Range Rover, with a personalised number plate, passed three times before the business magnate left the vehicle dressed in a dark three-piece suit, white shirt and dark tie.

Ecclestone was walked in through the building’s exit by court security, along with his legal team.

Chief Magistrate Paul Goldspring allowed him to stand outside the dock after his barrister Clare Montgomery QC said her client was “having a little bit of trouble hearing”.

Ecclestone stood in the dock to confirm his name, date of birth and address in Knightsbridge, central London, before indicating a not guilty plea to a charge of fraud by false representation between July 13 2013 and October 5 2016.

Ecclestone was granted unconditional bail ahead of his next appearance at Southwark Crown Court on September 19.

According to the charge, the business magnate allegedly claimed he had “established only a single trust, that being one in favour of your daughters”.

He is also alleged to have said “other than the trust established for your daughters you were not the settlor nor beneficiary of any trust in or outside the UK”.

Ecclestone – who has three grown-up daughters, Deborah, 67, Tamara, 38, and Petra, 33, and a young son, Ace – allegedly made the representations “intending to make a gain, namely not stated, for yourself”.

The charge against the billionaire was authorised by the Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) last month after an investigation by HM Revenue and Customs (HMRC), which said the probe had been “complex and worldwide”.

-PA

 

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