Singapore authorities have added two additional charges against the director of a local accounting firm in relation to the case tied to disgraced German payments company Wirecard AG.
R. Shanmugaratnam, a director of Citadelle Corporate Services Pte, was charged with “willfully and with intent to defraud” falsifying letters to Wirecard UK & Ireland, and Cardsystems Middle East FZ LLC, that the Singapore firm held tens of millions in euros in escrow accounts, according to charge sheets filed on Wednesday and seen by Bloomberg News.
The accusations follow four similar charges against the 54-year-old Singaporean, the first person to be indicted in the city-state over the spectacular collapse of Wirecard, which has reverberated across the world.
See: Singapore charges Citadelle Corporate Services director for falsifying letters in Wirecard case
The first of this week’s two charges says that in May 2016, Shanmugaratnam falsely stated that there was a balance of 41.5 million euros ($67.3 million) held by Citadelle in an escrow account on March 31, 2016. The other charge says that the same month, he misrepresented that there were 30.4 million euros held by Citadelle in another escrow account.
Shanmugaratnam’s lawyer, N. Sreenivasan, didn’t immediately reply to a message seeking comment.
Widening Scandal
The Wirecard scandal has continued to widen and now threatens to engulf top politicians, regulators and auditors in Germany. Former Wirecard Chief Executive Officer Markus Braun was re-arrested in July as German prosecutors said the company knew about massive losses as early as 2015.
Munich prosecutors last month arrested Oliver Bellenhaus, the managing director of Cardsystems Middle East, the fintech company’s Dubai-based unit, according to a person familiar with the issue. Bellenhaus headed that unit, which has been dissolved.
In June, Singapore financial regulators said they are working with the local police to scrutinize aspects of the Wirecard case. Last year, Singapore police raided Wirecard’s local offices after an employee in the city-state alleged that a member of the company’s finance team engaged in accounting breaches.
Singapore is home to Wirecard’s Asia-Pacific headquarters and the company has been expanding aggressively in the region.