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Guy Wildenstein: Leading art dealer cleared of tax fraud | |
(35 minutes later) | |
The patriarch of an international art-dealing dynasty has been cleared of concealing paintings and properties from the French tax authorities. | The patriarch of an international art-dealing dynasty has been cleared of concealing paintings and properties from the French tax authorities. |
Guy Wildenstein and seven other defendants were accused of trying to hide millions of euros in assets. | |
The presiding judge of a Paris court said there had been a "clear attempt" at concealment. | |
But he acquitted them because of shortcomings in both the investigation and French tax fraud legislation. | |
Guy Wildenstein gave a rare interview three months ago in which he denied wrongdoing and said he hoped he would not be made into a "scapegoat". | |
The Wildenstein family estate includes famous paintings, Caribbean properties, racehorses, and a Kenyan ranch. | |
The level of secrecy around the family fortune was first uncovered in the late 1990s during messy divorce proceedings between Guy's brother Alec and his then-wife, Jocelyn. | |
Ten years later in 2008, after Alec's death, Guy Wildenstein declared an inheritance of $61m (£50m; €57m). | |
But repeated claims by other women who had married into the family led investigators to look again at the Wildenstein finances in 2010. |
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