Deutsche Welle, 10 November 2012
One of the
world's leading dealers in stringed instruments has been jailed for fraud and
embezzlement. The German violin expert's web of deceit was exposed after his
business collapsed in 2010.
A court in
Vienna jailed a top German dealer in Stradivarius violins and other rare stringer
instruments on Friday for six years for running a multi-million dollar fraud
and embezzlement empire.
The court
sentenced Dieter Machold for using instruments that he was supposed to be
selling on behalf of his clients to obtain bank credits to finance his business
activities and private life.
"I am
a failure. I have lost everything," Machold said in a Vienna court after
his conviction.
"You
played for high stakes and you lost a lot, but you understand you have to take
the responsibility for this," Judge Claudia Moravec-Loidolt told him.
An ascent
'built on sand'
The sixty
three-year-old's Bremen-based business grew impressively over the years, and
Machold came to serve leading musicians and collectors. He opened branches in
Zurich, New York, Chicago and Vienna.
But his
business collapsed two years ago, forcing Machold to declare bankruptcy. He has
accumulated debts worth up to 150 million euros ($191 million), according to
newspaper reports.
Prosecutor
Herbert Harammer had narrated the career of the shamed businessman, who came to
be one of the most influential dealers in instruments on the planet.
"This
ascent was built on sand," Harammer had said to the court, accusing
Machold of leading a lifestyle that was a farce, considering that his business
had been insolvent since the middle of 2006. Machold lived in a castle in
Austria, had a taste for luxury cars and collected watches and cameras.
His ex-wife
and her mother were each handed one-year suspended sentences for aiding
Machold, by helping him conceal musical instruments and a watch collection
during the collapse of his business.
sej/mz (Reuters, AP)

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