UNIBET BOSS STILL IN CUSTODY (Update)
26 October 2007
Awaiting transfer to France and hopefully a
withdrawal of charges
Hopes that Petter Nylander, the CEO of Unibet detained
at Schipol airport on a European warrant signed by a
French judge (see previous InfoPowa reports) would be
released following an international outcry faded today
as arrangements went ahead for his transfer to France.
Earlier, statements by French spokesmen that the charges
laid against him by French gambling monopolies for
contravening 19th century laws should be withdrawn gave
hope that the executive would be released immediately,
but this has not transpired.
Instead, Nylander has been released from the airport
holding facility to an Amsterdam hotel, where he has
been able to consult with lawyers and speak with
management at his company.
Ragnar Hellenius, chief financial officer and deputy CEO
said: “I am very pleased to confirm that I have spoken
to Petter over the phone. He is now together with our
lawyers at a hotel in Amsterdam. Under the
circumstances, we had of course wanted this process to
be faster and that Petter had been transferred to Paris
immediately. We take for granted that when Petter
finally is on French soil, the judge will release him
very soon without charge. Petter is obviously very tired
and the detention has not been pleasant. He is still in
the good mood and wants to be released in order for him
to join his family.”
Nylander lives in the UK, and was detained as he boarded
a flight home from Amsterdam on Monday.
Ewout Keelers, legal counsel at Unibet, said Nylander's
arrest was a political act. "To use an arrest warrant to
protect a gambling monopoly is way beyond that which
could be viewed as acceptable," he said.
Nylander’s lawyer Dominique Santacru said the arrest had
its real roots in a request the French government made
to speak to him about the company’s activities in the
French market earlier this year.
In response, Nylander had suggested that such a hearing
should be held in the UK as he did not want to be placed
under arrest, a fate that had befallen former Unibet
deputy chief executive Didier Dewyn in April of this
year. The European arrest warrant was then issued by a
judge in the Paris suburb of Nanterre as a result of
Nylander’s 'refusal' to attend the hearing.
Online Casino News courtesy of
InfoPowa
More news here.
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