Ecclestone explains payment to banker

Formula One Chief Executive Bernie Ecclestone , right, talks to lawyer Sven Thomas in a courtroom in Munich Tuesday July 15, 2014. Ecclestone is charged with bribery and incitement to breach of trust "in an especially grave case" over a US $44 million payment to a German banker, that prosecutors allege was meant to facilitate the sale of the Formula One Group to a buyer of Ecclestone's liking. (AP Photo/Andrea Rehle,pool)

Formula One Chief Executive Bernie Ecclestone , right, talks to lawyer Sven Thomas in a courtroom in Munich Tuesday July 15, 2014. Ecclestone is charged with bribery and incitement to breach of trust "in an especially grave case" over a US $44 million payment to a German banker, that prosecutors allege was meant to facilitate the sale of the Formula One Group to a buyer of Ecclestone's liking. (AP Photo/Andrea Rehle,pool)

Published Jul 15, 2014

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Munich, Germany - Formula One boss Bernie Ecclestone told a court on Tuesday that a multi-million dollar payment to a jailed German banker was designed to buy the man's silence.

Giving detailed evidence for the first time in his bribery trial, Ecclestone repeated earlier statements that the payment to former BayernLB chief risk officer Gerhard Gribkowsky was an insurance policy after the German put him under pressure over his tax affairs.

“I was a little sarcastic when I asked, ‘Would 50 million help you?’,” he said of a conversation with Gribkowsky.

“It was the cheapest insurance policy I have ever seen,” added Ecclestone, a billionaire who is a familiar face to millions of motorsport fans around the world.

Ecclestone is accused of channelling $44 million (R470 million) to Gribkowsky in return for smoothing the sale of a major stake in the business to private equity fund CVC which became the largest shareholder in Formula One in 2006.

The prosecution alleges that Ecclestone, 83, wanted CVC to take control as it meant he could stay on as chief executive of a business he had been instrumental in building.

Ecclestone, who denies wrongdoing, could face up to 10 years in prison if found guilty and a conviction would end his long grip on the business.

Ecclestone admits paying Gribkowsky but has maintained that this was because the German was threatening to make false claims to the British authorities about his tax status that could have jeopardised his fortune.

The case began in April and is expected to run until at least October. It is being heard only two days each week to fit around Ecclestone's commitments to Formula One. The next Grand Prix will be run in Germany this coming weekend.

The Munich court jailed Gribkowsky for eight and a half years in 2012 for corruption over the payments from Ecclestone.

State-owned BayernLB became a major shareholder in Formula One following the collapse of the Kirch media group in 2002.

Reuters

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