Ex-Porsche Executives May Face Criminal Charges Over Market Manipulation

Former Luxury Car Executives May Face Criminal Charges
FILE - In this June 29, 2009 file picture a a logo of a car of German car maker Volkswagen VW is reflected in the varnish of a Porsche sports car in Dresden. Shares in Volkswagen AG soared higher on Thursday July 5, 2012 after Europe's biggest automaker announced a deal to complete the takeover of sports car manufacturer Porsche by the end of the month, which the company said will result in savings of some 700 million euro (US $ 880 million) per year. Volkswagen is to acquire the 50.1 percent in Porsche's capital that it doesn't already hold from holding company Porsche SE for 4.46 billion euro plus one Volkswagen share. The arrangement allows it to book the acquisition as an internal reorganization, which is advantageous in tax terms. (AP Photo/ Matthias Rietschel,File)
FILE - In this June 29, 2009 file picture a a logo of a car of German car maker Volkswagen VW is reflected in the varnish of a Porsche sports car in Dresden. Shares in Volkswagen AG soared higher on Thursday July 5, 2012 after Europe's biggest automaker announced a deal to complete the takeover of sports car manufacturer Porsche by the end of the month, which the company said will result in savings of some 700 million euro (US $ 880 million) per year. Volkswagen is to acquire the 50.1 percent in Porsche's capital that it doesn't already hold from holding company Porsche SE for 4.46 billion euro plus one Volkswagen share. The arrangement allows it to book the acquisition as an internal reorganization, which is advantageous in tax terms. (AP Photo/ Matthias Rietschel,File)

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - German prosecutors will soon decide whether to bring criminal charges of market manipulation against the former top management of German sportscar maker Porsche AG, magazine Der Spiegel reported.

Former Chief Executive Wendelin Wiedeking and former Chief Financial Officer Holger Haerter have been subject to an investigation into alleged market manipulation and prosecutors have all but completed their case preparations, Der Spiegel reported on Sunday, without specifying its sources.

The city of Stuttgart's prosecutors office, Wiedeking and Haerter could not be reached for comment.

The two former executives and Porsche have repeatedly rejected the allegations and Der Spiegel cited their lawyers as saying the accusations were without merit.

Prosecutors in Stuttgart are about to give case files to the executives' lawyers and give them a chance to comment on the accusations but are otherwise ready to make their case, the magazine said.

The maximum penalty for the charges prepared against Wiedeking and Haerter is five years in prison, it said.

Wiedeking and Haerter have been accused of pursuing plans for Porsche to take over much larger carmaker Volkswagen

After chalking up billions of euros in debt following an unsuccessful attempt to buy Volkswagen, Porsche struggled to refinance in 2009 and was eventually forced to seek a rescue from Volkswagen.

The two car makers dropped merger plan last year because of U.S. and German investor lawsuits accusing Porsche of covertly amassing VW shares, causing short-sellers to lose billions.

But last month, VW and Porsche agreed a deal allowing VW to buy the remaining half of Porsche for 4.46 billion euros.

(Reporting by Ludwig Burger and Hendrik Sackmann; Editing by Catherine Evans)

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