Livedoor boss jailed for two and a half years

Takafumi Horie punished with stiff sentence after being found guilty of false accounting and stock manipulation in Tokyo

Written by David Jetuah

A Tokyo judge has made an example of Takafumi Horie by sentencing him to a jail term of nearly three years. 

The disgraced head of Livedoor, the collapsed internet portal company was found guilty of false accounting and stock manipulation by Judge Toshiyuki Kosaka.  

Prosecutors said Livedoor had deliberately misled investors in 2004 by reporting a pre-tax profit of about 5bn Yen to hide losses of 310m Yen.

One such fund, Kosaka said, 'had nothing to do with Livedoor's main business ... its purpose was to manipulate Livedoor's accounts'. 

Horie's decision to plead not guilty to charges of making false financial statements in a bid to hide Livedoor's losses and boost its shares backfired spectacularly as the judge imposed a custodial sentence. 

Historically, Japanese captains of industry who have pleaded guilty in accountancy fraud cases have avoided prison time with suspended terms, but Horie's refusal to admit any guilt was seen as a key factor in the judge's decision to send him to prison. 

Horie, who within the space of a decade built the internet portal business into an empire worth more than £3bn at its peak, maintained throughout the trial that he had been targeted by traditional business interests appalled by his meteoric rise which was founded on aggressive buyouts of other firms.

But in reaching his ruling Kosaka said Horie had masterminded the construction of a network of dummy investment partnerships 'for the purpose of evading the law.'
'At that point, the prosecution's case was proven,' he told a packed courtroom.

Commentators have drawn close parallels with the Enron trial, after chief exec Horie was found guilty after key evidence was provided by former CFO Ryoji Miyauchi. Horie's lawyers had also claimed the prosecution had relied too heavily on grey areas in the law's treatment of aggressive takeovers.

Horie was released after posting bail of 500m Yen and is planning to launch an appeal against the verdict.  

Further reading:

Livedoor sells financial business arm 

Japanese internet boss pleads not guilty 

Livedoor CFO admits to fiddling accounts

Enjoyed this article? Help spread the word:

Comments

Reader comments for this story

Also read

White papers

Related jobs

Spotlight

Richard Atkinson, FD of All England Tennis Court

Profile: Richard Atkinson, FD of All England Tennis Club

As Wimbledon reaches a heady climax, the FD of All...

PwC 10-year anniversary special report

Relive how the controversial mega-merger of Price Waterhouse and Coopers...

Make partner fast with YP

The latest edition of Young Professional features our definitive guide...

Find your next job

Find your next job
Salary Checker

Newsletters

Sign up here for the very latest news delivered to your inbox. Choose from the following options:

Search white papers

Search white papers

Have your say

Has the credit crunch made you fear for your job?
Yes, my company says jobs will go
Maybe, if things get worse, I could be hit
No, business is quite stable

Job of the week

More finance jobs...

Your next job