The Daily - The Escape of Carlos Ghosn
Episode Date: January 14, 2020Carlos Ghosn’s trial was poised to be one of the most closely watched in Japanese history — a case involving claims of corporate greed, wounded national pride and a rigged legal system. Then the f...ormer Nissan chief pulled off an unimaginable escape. Guest: Ben Dooley, a business reporter for The New York Times based in Japan. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading: Mr. Ghosn leaves behind a contentious history at one of the world’s largest car manufacturers, a record which is now unlikely to be scrutinized in Japanese courts. “Nobody’s going to take it from me,” Mr. Ghosn said of his legacy.The tycoon’s escape preparations spanned the globe, revealing the means by which the well-connected can evade legal accountability.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Bavaro. This is The Daily.
Today.
The trial was poised to be the most closely watched in Japanese history.
A case involving claims of corporate greed,
wounded national pride, and a rigged legal system.
Until the defendant pulled off an unimaginable escape.
Ben Dooley with the latest in the saga of Carlos Ghosn.
It's Tuesday, January 14th.
Ben, set the scene for us. It's just before New Year's in Tokyo. What are you doing?
So, I'm fast asleep. It's about 7.30 in the morning. I'm expecting to have a very easy holiday.
I'm expecting to have a very easy holiday.
Now, government offices are all closed for a week.
Nothing's happening in Japan.
And all of a sudden, my phone starts ringing.
And it rings and rings and rings.
And finally, I decide I better answer it.
When I pick it up, it's New York. And then when you say New York, you mean the feared editors of the New York Times?
Yes, the feared editors. You never want to get an early morning phone call from New York, you mean the feared editors of the New York Times? Yes, the feared editors.
You never want to get an early morning phone call from New York.
It's never good news.
It means either something bad has happened because someone else did something that you
need to be worried about, or you've made some terrible mistake.
And what they tell me is that Carlos Ghosn, the most famous criminal defendant in Japan,
has just mysteriously disappeared and reappeared in Lebanon.
Well, it's a story we're all talking about, the escape straight out of the movies.
The juiciest story of the new year, at least so far.
An international cloak and dagger escape.
Dramatic and mysterious escape of Carlos Ghosn.
Former Nissan CEO and chairman, Carlos Ghosn has left Japan.
He's now in Lebanon.
Yes.
Well, this is by magic.
Extrude me.
Once a CEO, now an international fugitive.
And, you know, my first reaction is, how could he possibly have done this?
You know, it seems like something out of a movie, you know, impossible.
And then remind us who Carlos Ghosn is.
And then remind us who Carlos Ghosn is.
So Carlos Ghosn is this legendary CEO who made his name by reviving Nissan, this Japanese company, one of the country's largest automakers.
He took the company from essentially what he has recently called a dead company and brought it back to life.
And it was this miracle of a turnaround that made him famous in Japan and throughout the world.
Carlos Ghosn is regarded as one of the most dazzling managers in the automotive business.
He is a huge figure, not just in Japan, not just for Nissan, but in the car industry. And he went on to become the CEO of Nissan and also the French automaker Renault.
CEO of Nissan and also the French automaker Renault.
He turned things around at Renault and then Nissan,
where in 2005, Carlos Ghosn became the first person to run two Fortune 500 global companies at the same time.
And those two companies formed an alliance
and became one of the world's largest automakers.
It's sort of hard to overstate the significance
of Ghosn to Nissan and to Renault
and this alliance. And he just went from strength to strength, became this hugely popular figure in
the corporate business world, flying all around the world. He has houses in different countries.
And then all of a sudden, out of the blue, November 2018, he lands at an airport in Tokyo
and is arrested. Nissan chairman Carlos
Ghosn has been arrested for allegedly underreporting his income. And over the following several months,
he's charged with four counts of financial wrongdoing. The internal probe by the Japanese
automaker found multiple violations, including salary fraud and personal use of company assets.
Essentially, prosecutors say that he was trying to enrich himself for the company.
So that's the situation he finds himself in.
He's facing trial on these four charges when he flees from Japan to Lebanon.
And what's the answer to that question you have of how this happened?
What's the story?
Well, first, it's important to understand that he's under house arrest.
But it's not super strict.
I mean, he goes out to dinners.
He travels to Kyoto.
So he's been able to move around fairly easily.
But as best as we can tell from our reporting and from local media and government statements,
is on December 29th, he walks out of his home in Tokyo.
This is a two-story, fairly large home in central Tokyo in a swanky neighborhood.
And there are three cameras above the door that were installed by the prosecutors to keep a watch on him.
And he just strolls out.
He's got a face mask on, like a surgical mask, the kind of thing that people typically wear here to stop themselves from getting sick or stop other people from getting sick.
He's got a hat, black clothes, and he walks out to a nearby hotel. He meets two men there,
and they get on a bullet train to Osaka, which is a city to the southwest of Tokyo.
which is a city to the southwest of Tokyo.
They're on the train for about two hours.
They get off the train.
They walk into a hotel.
And then the two men walk out without Carlos Ghosn.
But what they have is these two boxes, two large boxes. And the boxes have been described as sort of boxes for holding audio equipment,
maybe like speakers or kinds of things you might see roadies carrying at a concert.
And these two men take these boxes to the Kansai International Airport,
to the private jet terminal.
And the boxes are too big to go through the luggage screening,
so they're not screened.
You know, keep in mind it's almost New Year's.
People are off their guard.
You know, they're not really that interested in checking to see what's in these boxes.
You know, they're just kind of relaxing and looking forward to their holiday.
And these men just wheel these boxes right onto the plane, a private jet that's waiting there.
And the plane takes off.
And in one of those boxes, we believe, is Carlos Ghosn.
Wow.
So Japan's most famous criminal defendant flees the country in an audio box.
That's what we think happened.
I mean, what you're describing feels both very simple
and extremely elaborate.
Yeah, well, you know, this was not something that he did by himself
with two friends. This is something that took a lot of resources, a lot of planning.
And, you know, it's something that he's famous for is being this detail-oriented planner
and someone who likes to manage lots of people, like big teams of people. You know, so you can imagine this was a pretty complex operation,
even if the execution was simple.
Ben, after all of that detailed planning and this escape,
why is he going to Lebanon, of all places?
Well, he had three passports.
He was a citizen of Brazil, France, and Lebanon.
And Lebanon was the closest.
It doesn't have an extradition treaty with Japan,
which means that the Lebanese government
will never send him back to Japan to face a trial.
And he's something of a national hero in Lebanon,
so he could expect a hero's welcome.
So what's the reaction back in Tokyo
once word trickles back that he has pulled this off?
Silence. Absolute silence. They're caught completely off guard. But behind that silence,
there's sort of a embarrassment that the prosecutors have allowed the country's most
famous criminal defendant to slip through their fingers. And some outrage, even among people who supported
him, there was a sense that he'd gone too far and that he should have stayed in Japan to defend
himself. That would have been the most appropriate thing for him to do. And Ben, what are you doing
at this point? Because a story that I assume you are very much responsible for has literally just up
and left the country that you cover. Yeah, well, you know, suddenly, this story that I was hugely
responsible for when I was supposed to be taking a vacation just appears in my lap. And I'm just
frantically calling as many people as I can, you know, getting in touch with his PR team, his
lawyers, you know, various people that I've spoken to over the previous year about his case.
Pretty much anyone I can think of.
And the big question I have is, now that he's free, is he going to talk?
And if so, will he talk to us?
And then I get a phone call.
And someone asked me,
if Carlos Ghosn is willing to talk to you,
would you be able to get on a plane to Lebanon?
Wow.
And I said,
of course.
We'll be right back.
Okay, so Ben, Carlos Ghosn is willing to talk to you.
What happens next?
So I go online and I buy a last-minute ticket to Beirut.
And, you know, I'm frantically packing,
get all my stuff in order,
run to Henaid Airport,
jump on the plane.
And 23 hours later,
I touch down in Lebanon.
Wow, that's a long flight.
Yeah, well, there's a layover in Paris,
so that wasn't so bad.
I had a croissant and some coffee.
So I'm in Lebanon, and I'm preparing to talk to Carlos Ghosn.
But before I get to sit down with him, first, there's this news conference that he's scheduled.
So we're in an Uber heading towards the press club,
where we're going to see Carlos Ghosn give his first press conference since he was arrested in November of 2018.
It's a rainy day today, traffic's pretty intense.
So I and one of my colleagues from the Beirut Bureau
go to a press club where the conference is going to be held.
All right, we've just arrived at the venue.
And we get there and it's just chaos.
I mean, there are hundreds of reporters.
They're all clamoring to get in.
People are screaming, shouting, pushing.
Great, we're heading through security into the venue.
Got some guy with a guard dog here.
Tension's running a little bit high here.
They're armed guards,
you know, with dogs
and TV trucks everywhere.
Sorry, we're on the list here.
No time.
And we get inside.
And we go upstairs
and we walk into this
big empty white room with chairs lined up.
There are about 100 reporters there from all over the world.
I think this is what's usually referred to as a media circus.
Please be seated. Please be seated.
And they're all waiting to hear what Carlos Ghosn has to say.
and they're all waiting to hear what Carlos Ghosn has to say.
So he's about to walk in.
We just heard that we're asking him if he's walking in.
He's with his wife, Carol.
And when he comes in, people just swarm him.
It's a crush of reporters.
All the cameramen and photographers are pushing up,
trying to get a good shot of him as he walks into the room. Flashbulbs are going off and everyone's just crowded around him. So it's pretty exciting. I've been writing about this guy for
almost a year now. It's the first time I've actually seen him in the flesh.
He looks healthy. He's got a nice black suit on, red tie. I mean, you know, he's the picture of a CEO.
So no worse for the wear.
You wouldn't know it.
And he walks up to the lectern and the show starts.
Ladies and gentlemen, I want to thank you for taking the time to be here.
It's everything that he's been saving up for the last year.
As you can imagine, today is a very important day for me.
One, that I have looked forward to every single day
for more than 400 days.
He just is taking the opportunity to explain himself,
what happened to him, his whole story.
Since I was brutally taken from my world as I knew it,
ripped from my family, my friends, my communities,
from Renault, Nissan, and Mitsubishi,
and the 450,000 women and men who comprise those companies.
And he starts walking us through his history with Nissan.
A brand which was nowhere in 1999, which became one of the top 60 brands in the world.
And how he turned it around.
And the amazing success that the company had while he was CEO.
You know, a CEO is here as long as he performs.
I didn't stay 17 years head of Nissan because I was gone.
I was there only because I was performing.
I was delivering growth.
I was delivering profit.
I was delivering cash flow.
I was delivering dividends.
And then he starts to talk about the arrest.
I was arrested on November 19, 2018. And then he starts to talk about the arrest. And how it happened.
And how he was completely caught off guard.
He says it was like Pearl Harbor.
Huh. He says his arrest was like the sneak attack from Japan that led the United States into World War II.
Yeah, exactly. He said he had no idea what was coming.
This is true that when it's planned and it's confidential and it's secret,
well, it happens, and you'll be surprised, and I was surprised.
And then he starts to go through all the charges against him.
The first accusation is the underreporting.
This is the main accusation for which I was arrested.
And he's got slides, he's projecting documents on the wall.
You know, I think we have the list.
Yeah, we have here the list.
You know, getting way into the weeds of these issues,
frankly, trying to litigate them in front of this audience.
We continue.
This is another one.
And people at this point are starting to get a little antsy.
They're starting to have conversations behind me
because you can't read the documents.
And even if you could, there's no way that we were in a position
to judge what they actually said about the charges against him.
But the larger point he's trying to make is that this is a stitch-up.
But obviously I didn't know that Nissan was behind it.
And it was all staged way before between the prosecutor and the company.
That all the charges against him
are completely political.
They're made up.
And he's saying that the reason why
the Japanese government brought these charges against them
is basically because he wounded their national pride.
Hmm.
And what's his argument for how he did that?
So basically it comes down to the idea that as the head of Renault,
he had been tasked by the French government to make the alliance between Renault and Nissan stronger.
To make the alliance so strong that the two companies would never be able to be separated.
so strong that the two companies would never be able to be separated. And this was seen in Japan,
he argues, as essentially an attempt to take one of the crown jewels of Japan's auto industry and turn it into a French company. And if this were to have gone through, the argument was,
then France would be in control of one of Japan's biggest and most important companies.
Unfortunately, there was no trust.
And that was something that the Japanese government
and certain people at Nissan were just unwilling to allow to happen.
And some of our Japanese friends thought,
the only way to get rid of the influence of Frodo on Nissan is to get rid of me. So he says that the crime he committed, which it sounds like he doesn't think is a crime at all,
is taking a Japanese brand and making it less Japanese
and offending the people and the government of Japan in the process.
Right. And he says that was not at all his plan, but that was the fear.
And that's what led to his downfall.
According to Carlos Ghosn.
Yes.
Let me continue. 130 days in prison, solitary confinement, tiny cell without window.
And he also went into detail about his experience in the Japanese justice system.
Shower twice a week, tried to ask to have more, they said no. Prescribed medication is forbidden,
you can get only the medicine from the prison. How he had spent, you know, more than 130 days
in a Japanese jail, waiting to get on bail. During that time, he had been interrogated by prosecutors without his lawyer
from seven to 11 hours a day. And even once he got out of jail, there were these restrictions
put on his daily life. And the most egregious one for him, he said, was that he wasn't allowed
to meet his wife. And the question was very interesting. It was saying, why do they want
to meet? And you say, okay, how about a Zoom, a conference?
He said, what do they want to talk about?
And Japanese prosecutors had essentially said
that they believed that if he were allowed to speak to her,
he might tamper with evidence,
might try to get to witnesses in the case.
And his argument is, well, that's ridiculous
because if I wanted to do that,
I could have done that through anyone. I didn't have to use my wife. So the only reason why they
were forbidding me from seeing her was because they were punishing me.
Because they knew that by not allowing me to have a normal life, they were breaking me.
That they're trying to squeeze a confession out of him.
And when he refused to confess to the crimes they had charged him with,
they threatened to make his life a living hell.
I felt like I was not a human anymore.
So he said that all these elements add up to create a system of justice
that was rigged against him.
And that he had no chance of ever getting a fair trial in Japan.
And that's why he felt he had to escape.
And Ben, as you're sitting there hearing Carlos Ghosn make these arguments, what are you thinking?
And do they sound accurate and truthful? Or do they sound highly disputable?
It's impossible to say at this point. We haven't seen any of the evidence. And I think
if you were to ask the prosecutors, they would say, this is a man who lied to Nissan's shareholders.
This is a man who enriched himself at the company's expense. And it's just impossible to
know what the truth is at this point. Right, because he fled the country before the trial.
Right, exactly. I left Japan because I wanted justice.
That's why I left Japan.
I didn't run from justice.
I want justice.
Because justice is the only way
I want to establish my reputation.
And the only way what I've done during my life
is going to be recognized to its value.
And if I don't get it in Japan,
I'm going to get it somewhere else.
Thank you for your attention.
So Carlos Ghosn finishes up his presentation and he moves into the question and answer section.
And he starts answering questions in four different languages.
He's speaking Arabic, which is the language he spoke at home with his parents.
He's speaking Portuguese, which is the language of the country he was born, Brazil.
He's speaking French, the language of the country he was educated, and of course in English.
And I'm just watching him, you know,
flawlessly move from language to language,
answering these questions from reporters around the world.
And, you know, it occurs to me as I'm watching,
it's an incredible performance. And it says a lot about this guy's identity.
He's this transnational business person who essentially doesn't belong to
any one nation. He lives in this almost kind of like gray area, you know, between nation states.
And there's something about it that it seems is really essential to the case against him
and how he's responded to it. What do you mean?
and how he's responded to it.
What do you mean?
Well, he believes that the charges against him were brought by the Japanese because he is not Japanese.
So there's that on one hand.
But on the other hand, also, he feels like he's not beholden to Japanese justice.
As this person with passports from Brazil and France and Lebanon and houses around the world and connections and networks that span the globe, he doesn't feel like he has to subject himself to Japanese justice.
He believes that he can make the choice to just get up and leave, to disappear. Right. So whether or not this tactic can ever seem justified or not justified,
the message that Carlos Ghosn is sending by fleeing his trial in Japan
is that if you're a global CEO and you are well-connected and you have resources,
you get to choose which country's legal system you can abide by,
which ones you're willing to participate in,
and which ones you plan an to participate in, and which ones you plan
an elaborate escape from, right? Which basically boils down to not really feeling accountable to
any one country. Right. And it was a question that was bothering me, and I really wanted to
ask him about it. And I finally got the chance after the press conference ended and I got to sit down with him one-on-one. We went upstairs and I tried to set up the fancy recorder you guys made me buy and I
messed it up. So we didn't get the whole interview, unfortunately.
We forgive you. It had been a long week.
It had been a long week. And I sat down with him and I asked him that question.
You know, we probably will have people listening or reading or thinking to themselves that um okay maybe the
japanese justice system is rigged but the only reason why you could do this is because you're a
person of wealth uh you know you have power connections and that's what allowed you to
to escape japan i mean is that fair uh let you put the Japan. I mean, is that fair?
Let me put it the other way.
And, you know, he kind of danced around the question.
But he came down basically on the idea that the Japanese system is rigged.
So back to your question.
Yes, at the end of the day, I fell in a trap, you know, found a way out which requires resources and contacts, no doubt about it.
But the protection is not to have money.
The protection is avoid going in places where you can fall into a trap like this. And I think it's my responsibility today
to tell all the foreigners who are in Japan, be careful.
That was the message that he wanted to convey to the world.
And, you know, the great irony here is that
he says he's searching for justice,
but because of a decision that he made, he may never find it.
Because there's always going to be an asterisk next to this case.
He's not going to be able to make his case fully,
and the Japanese prosecutors are never going to be able to make it either.
So there's not going to be a real test of his innocence.
But what he has done is he has let CEOs around the world know that this is an option.
That if they don't like the justice in the country where they are, they can just get up and leave.
Thank you, Ben.
Thank you, Ben. Thank you, Michael.
We'll be right back. in two major Iranian cities as citizens expressed outrage over the acknowledgement that their government shot down a passenger plane,
killing everyone on board.
The protests against the government
are a striking turnaround for Iran's leaders.
Just a few days ago,
hundreds of thousands of Iranians
took to the streets in support of the government
after the United States killed General Qasem Soleimani.
Many of those protesting the downing of the plane are calling for accountability from
the government, which had originally denied any role in the incident.
And Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey
has dropped out of the Democratic race for president
after failing to qualify for the next debate.
He now joins Julian Castro and Marianne Williamson
in quitting the race just before voting begins in Iowa.
Polling shows a close race in Iowa, with Joe Biden in the lead,
and the next three competitors, Bernie Sanders, Elizabeth Warren, and Pete Buttigieg,
in a statistical tie.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.