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        <title><![CDATA[Ex-Wirecard executive was reportedly an Austrian spy informant]]></title>
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            <media:title type="html">Ex-Wirecard executive was reportedly an Austrian spy informant</media:title>
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						<p>An ex-Wirecard executive who went on the lam amid the German payment firm&#8217;s <strong>$2 billion accounting scandal</strong> was reportedly a mole for Austrian spies.</p>
<p>German authorities have evidence that Jan Marsalek, Wirecard&#8217;s former chief operating officer, was an informant for the Office for the Protection of the Constitution and Counterterrorism, the Austrian intelligence agency known as the BVT, according to Munich&#8217;s <strong>Sueddeutsche Zeitung newspaper</strong>.</p>
<p>The outlet&#8217;s Thursday report cited the German government&#8217;s response to a written question from lawmaker Fabio De Masi. Another member of German parliament, Patrick Sensburg, <strong>told the Handelsblatt newspaper</strong> that Marsalek may have worked for &#8220;several secret services from different countries,&#8221; though he did not cite specific evidence for the claim.</p>
<p>&#8220;In clearing up the Wirecard scandal, Austria and Germany should now work closely and trustingly together,&#8221; Sensburg told the paper, according to a translation.</p>
<p>Authorities have been searching for Marsalek since Wirecard admitted in June that roughly 1.9 billion euros ($2.2 billion) listed on its accounts likely didn&#8217;t exist. The financial-tech giant <strong>filed for insolvency</strong> that month after <strong>former CEO Markus Braun was arrested</strong> in relation to the scandal.</p>
<p>Marsalek&#8217;s exact whereabouts are unknown, but Germany&#8217;s <strong>Der Spiegel magazine</strong> reported in July that he traveled to Minsk, Belarus soon after Wirecard suspended him in June.</p>
<p>Interpol has issued a so-called <strong>red notice</strong> for the 40-year-old, saying he faces charges for allegedly violating German securities laws, fraud and &#8220;criminal breach of trust.&#8221; Police have accused Marsalek and Braun of using bogus income from transactions related to deals with “third-party acquirers” to make the company look more attractive to investors.</p>
<p><em>With Post wires</em></p>
			
					
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                <dc:creator><![CDATA[GAGmen]]></dc:creator>
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