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Boris Becker faces jail for moving cash from business account after bankruptcy

The tennis star was found guilty of four charges under the Insolvency Act on Friday.

Henry Vaughan
Friday 08 April 2022 09:58 EDT
Boris Becker (front) with his son Noah leaving Southwark Crown Court, London (James Manning/PA)
Boris Becker (front) with his son Noah leaving Southwark Crown Court, London (James Manning/PA) (PA Wire)

Tennis star Boris Becker could be jailed for transferring hundreds of thousands of pounds from his business account after his bankruptcy.

The three-time Wimbledon champion, 54, told a jury his 50 million US dollar (about Ā£38 million) career earnings were swallowed up by an expensive divorce from his first wife Barbara Becker, child maintenance payments, and ā€œexpensive lifestyle commitmentsā€.

Former world number one Becker said he was ā€œshockedā€ and ā€œembarrassedā€ when he was declared bankrupt on June 21 2017 over an unpaid loan of more than Ā£3 million on his estate in Mallorca.

The German, who has lived in the UK since 2012, said he had co-operated with trustees tasked with securing his assets, even offering up his wedding ring, and relied on the advisers who managed his life.

But the six-time Grand Slam champion, who was supported in court by his partner Lilian de Carvalho Monteiro and eldest son Noah, was found guilty of four charges under the Insolvency Act by a jury at Southwark Crown Court on Friday.

The charges include removing property, two counts of failing to disclose estate, and concealing debt.

Judge Deborah Taylor released Becker on conditional bail ahead of sentencing on April 29, when he could face a jail sentence carrying a maximum term of seven years for each count.

The court was told the BBC commentator received 1.13 million euro (about Ā£950,000) from the sale of a Mercedes car dealership he owned in Germany, which was paid into a business account used as his ā€œpiggy bankā€ for personal expenses.

He was found guilty of transferring hundreds of thousands of pounds to other accounts, including those of his ex-wife Barbara and estranged wife Sharlely ā€œLillyā€ Becker, the mother of his fourth child.

Becker also spent 48,000 euro (around Ā£40,000) on an ankle operation at a private clinic, paid 12,500 euro (more than Ā£10,000) to a private jet company, and splashed out 6,000 euro (around Ā£5,000) at a luxury golf resort in China.

He was also convicted of failing to declare a property in Germany, and hiding an 825,000 euro (almost Ā£700,000) bank loan and shares in a tech firm.

He was acquitted of a further 20 charges, including nine counts of failing to hand over trophies and medals from his tennis career.

He told jurors he did not know the whereabouts of the memorabilia, including two of his three Wimbledon menā€™s singles trophies, including the 1985 title that catapulted him to stardom aged 17.

The other prizes were his 1992 Olympic gold medal, Australian Open trophies from 1991 and 1996, the Presidentā€™s Cup from 1985 and 1989, his 1989 Davis Cup trophy and a Davis Cup gold coin which he won in 1988.

Becker was cleared of failing to declare a second German property, as well as his interest in the Ā£2.5 million Chelsea flat occupied by his daughter Anna Ermakova, who was conceived during Beckerā€™s infamous encounter with waitress Angela Ermakova at London restaurant Nobu in 1999.

Giving evidence, Becker said he earned a ā€œvast amountā€ during his career, paying cash for a family home in Munich, a property in Miami, Florida, and the estate in Mallorca, which was worth about 50 million euro at the height of the property market.

But Becker, who went on to coach current world number one tennis player Novak Djokovic, work as a commentator and act as a brand ambassador for firms including Puma, said his income ā€œreduced dramaticallyā€ following his retirement in 1999.

He said he was involved in an ā€œexpensive divorceā€ from Barbara Becker in 2001 which involved high maintenance payments to their two sons, and had to support Ms Ermakova and her mother in a deal which included the Chelsea flat.

Becker, who was resident in Monte Carlo and Switzerland before moving to the UK, said he had ā€œexpensive lifestyle commitmentsā€, including his Ā£22,000-a-month rented house in Wimbledon, south-west London.

He also owed the Swiss authorities five million francs (about Ā£4 million) and separately just under one million euro (more than Ā£800,000) in liabilities over a conviction for tax evasion and attempted tax evasion in Germany in 2002.

The court heard Beckerā€™s bankruptcy resulted from a 4.6 million euro (about Ā£3.85 million) loan from private bank Arbuthnot Latham in 2013, and Ā£1.2 million, with a 25% interest rate, borrowed from British businessman John Caudwell, who founded Phones 4u, the following year.

He said bad publicity had damaged ā€œbrand Beckerā€, meaning he struggled to make enough money to pay off his debts, while his QC Jonathan Laidlaw said at the time of his bankruptcy Becker was too ā€œtrusting and reliantā€ on his advisers.

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