Italy’s finance police raided the headquarters of Serie A football club AC Milan on Tuesday as part of an investigation into potential irregularities over its 2022 sale by US hedge fund Elliott Management to private equity group RedBird.
Prosecutors launched their probe following allegations that
Elliott still controls AC Milan despite the sale to RedBird, according to a
search warrant seen by the Financial
Times that authorised the raids at the Casa Milan complex in the city’s
district of Portello.
The search warrant alleges the club’s current chief
executive Giorgio Furlani and his predecessor Ivan Gazidis fraudulently
concealed information that should have been communicated to the Italian
football federation concerning the ownership structure of the club. “It seems
that the majority of the funds used to buy the club originate from an
investment vehicle that does not belong to RedBird. The suspicion is that
Elliott currently maintains effective control of the company,” according to the
search warrant.
The warrant also claims Elliott indirectly controls French
football club Lille, which the prosecutors allege to be in breach of rules set
by the governing body of European football Uefa. Elliott rejected the
allegations as “false”, adding it has no control over AC Milan or any stake in
the club since the sale two years ago.
“We note reports this evening that the current and former
CEOs of AC Milan are under investigation in connection with an allegation that
the football club still belongs to Elliott, and it was hidden from the football
federation,” the company said. “This allegation is false.”
RedBird also denied on Tuesday that the hedge fund controls
the club. The allegations are based on filings with the US Securities and
Exchange Commission and other documents previously seized by Italian
investigators, said people close to the investigation.
Italian financial police also searched the homes of Furlani
and Gazidis, according to the warrant, over allegations that they were
obstructing Covisoc, the Italian football supervisory commission.
A spokesperson for AC Milan confirmed the raids and said the
club was not involved in the investigation. “The club is providing full
co-operation with the investigating authority,” the spokesperson said.
New York-based RedBird acquired AC Milan from Elliott less
than two years ago for €1.2bn. As part of the deal, Elliott agreed to lend
RedBird €600mn via a so-called “vendor loan” to finance the transaction.
The investigation stemmed from a complaint lodged by AC
Milan’s former Luxembourg-based investor, Blue Skye, which “raised doubts” over
the RedBird deal immediately after the sale, accusing Elliott of “lack of
transparency over the terms of the sale”, a lawyer for Blue Skye said on
Tuesday.
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