Japanese court convicts former Nissan CEO Greg Kelly of role in evading Carlos Gonn’s payments

“The court finds there is unpaid” and non-disclosure of the “total amount” constitutes “false” reporting, Kelly’s chief justice told the court.

However, the judge said Kelly was unaware of all the 9.3 billion yen ($ 80.46 million) hidden payments in a decade, instead blaming Toshiaki Onuma, an official who oversees the details of Gon’s compensation as a clerk, for some of them. Onuma, who was a key prosecution witness, was not tried in exchange for his cooperation.

The judge sentenced Kelly to six months probation.

Nissan (NSANF) was fined 200 million yen ($ 1.73 million) for not disclosing Gon’s pay.
Former Nissan CEO Greg Kelly has pleaded not guilty in the trial in Japan
The verdict at the end of an 18-month trial and more than three years after Kelly’s arrest along with Gon may be the closest a Japanese court is approaching a ruling on the former Nissan boss’s guilt. Gon is out of the reach of Japanese prosecutors after fleeing to Lebanon in 2019, hidden in a box on a private plane.

The allegations stemmed from a 2010 change in financial regulations that required executives earning more than 1 billion yen ($ 8.71 million) to disclose their pay.

Kelly has denied violating the law and says his only intention is to give Gon, who was also Renault’s chief executive, a compensation package to dissuade him from turning to a competing carmaker.

The decision means Kelly may be able to leave Japan for the first time since his arrest.
Carlos Gon has a plan to help Lebanon's collapsing economy

“While it was three long years for the Kelly family, this chapter is over. He and Dee (his wife) can start their next chapter in Tennessee,” US Ambassador to Japan Ram Emanuel said in a statement.

For now, the former world trotter Gon is stuck in Lebanon, unable to travel abroad without risking arrest and return to Japan.

In addition to the accusation of concealing $ 80 million in profits over eight years, Gonn is also accused of enriching himself at the expense of his employer through $ 5 million in payments to a car dealership in the Middle East and temporarily transferring personal investment losses to books. to his former employer.

Gon denied all charges against him.