Court process against ex-tennis professional Boris Becker in London

Updated on 03/29/2022, 16:15

  • There are 24 charges against Boris Becker in a court case in London.
  • The former tennis professional is said to have withheld accounts, real estate and trophies from his insolvency administrator.
  • Becker explains in court that he did not deal with his finances: “I was busy traveling around the world and playing tennis.”

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It is a stressful, turbulent life that Boris Becker led for a long time. How many accounts does the former tennis star own, where property was held in his name and where the trophies he won are stored?

Becker has no idea about this, as he repeatedly testified when asked by his lawyer Jonathan Laidlaw. In London, the Wimbledon winner is currently in court.

On Tuesday, the 54-year-old had another opportunity to comment in detail on the allegations before Southwark Crown Court in London. In a firm voice, but visibly nervous and tense, Becker often replies “That’s correct” to what his lawyer said.

Becker is said not to have disclosed assets in the event of bankruptcy

There is a lot at stake for Becker. Once a celebrated world-class athlete and tennis prodigy, affairs and financial scandals have scratched his image. It often seems as if he is much more respected in his adopted home of Great Britain, where he is popular as an expert for tennis broadcasts, than in Germany. Now, of all places, he is being tried in London, where he has lived for years.

The indictment accuses the Leimener of not having disclosed assets during his insolvency. Among them are several tennis trophies and awards, but also real estate and accounts. The indictment consists of 24 counts. Theoretically, Becker could face up to seven years in prison.

Nothing remains of 25 million US dollars

Already on Monday he had emphasized that financial questions were always left to his advisors and that he had not read any contracts. Becker earned a total of a good 25 million US dollars in prize money in his career from 1984 to 1999. Nothing is left. In 2017, a court in London declared him bankrupt. That’s still the case, Becker emphasized.

In a dark blue suit and white shirt, the 54-year-old followed his lawyer’s instructions with great concentration. Again and again he took a sip from a water bottle, sometimes he tugged at his collar. File folders lay on the floor next to him, in which he occasionally consulted documents.

His partner Lilian De Carvalho Monteiro sat diagonally behind him. Private questions are also raised in the process – among other things, it is about whether Becker bought his daughter Anna Ermakowa an apartment.

On Tuesday it was initially about his parents’ house in Leimen, where Becker was registered as the owner. Without his knowledge, as he claims. Other properties were also mentioned, and here too the star athlete said he was not clear about the ownership structure.

A similar picture emerges for accounts. That his parents opened an account in his name in 1989? “I’ve been busy traveling the world and playing tennis,” said Becker. He doesn’t know why he had three US bank accounts in Belgium. They were probably opened as part of an advertising partnership.

What about the trophies?

Insolvency administrator Mark Ford would also like to have several awards from Becker. The tennis star withdraw the trophies from access. Becker denies that. He just doesn’t know where the trophies are. In general, it’s not about the originals that he was handed on the pitch after the final. Agents or supervisors usually received a much smaller replica version, Becker said.

He himself was already on his way to the next tournament. “The trophies themselves were not important to me,” he said. For him, the title itself was more important. Now he regrets this view. If he finds the trophies again, he will hand them over immediately, he assured.

Next, Becker has to face the public prosecutor’s office, the survey is scheduled to begin on Tuesday. It is eagerly awaited to see whether he knows how to return the probably much more critical questions just as skillfully. Finally, a jury made up almost exclusively of men decides on the result. A decision is expected for next week. (dpa/fab)

The German tennis star Boris Becker has to answer to a court in London.

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