Turkey seeks jail for ex-Nissan boss Ghosn escape suspects
Carlos Ghosn, the former Nissan and Renault chief executive, looks on during a news conference at the Holy Spirit University of Kaslik, in Jounieh, Lebanon, Sept. 29, 2020. (Reuters Photo)


Turkish prosecutors on Wednesday demanded hefty jail terms for three suspects accused of helping smuggle former Nissan boss Carlos Ghosn "in a large musical instrument case" from Japan to Lebanon.

The trial is trying to piece together the details of how Ghosn – a French-Lebanese-Brazilian national who was a global business superstar when his career came crashing to an end – fled Japan in December 2019 while out on bail facing financial misconduct charges.

The 66-year-old fugitive was arrested in November 2018 and spent 130 days in prison before completing an audacious escape act that humiliated Japanese justice officials and raised questions about who was involved.

The hearing concerns an employee with Turkish private airline MNG Jet who allegedly used four pilots and two flight attendants to move Ghosn from Japan to Lebanon via Istanbul.

Prosecutors on Wednesday asked two of the pilots – Noyan Pasin and Bahri Kutlu Sömek – and MNG Jet’s Okan Kösemen to be found guilty of being involved in a conspiracy to smuggle a migrant.

The charge carries a 12-year jail sentence under Turkey’s penal code.

Prosecutors asked two other pilots to be convicted of failing to report a crime – which carries a one-year jail sentence – and for the flight attendants to be acquitted.

A defense lawyer told Agence France-Presse (AFP) that the verdict will be read on Feb. 24.

"Even though this is a political case, we have not faced any pressure," defense lawyer Sedat Erdem Aydın told AFP.

"It has been a transparent investigation."

70 breathing holes

The indictment says the escape plan from Japan to Lebanon involved a stopover in Istanbul instead of a direct flight "so as not to arouse suspicions."

Former U.S. Green Beret member Michael Taylor and his son Peter are accused together with Lebanese national George-Antoine Zayek of recruiting MNG Jet and overseeing the secret operation.

The Taylors are currently fighting extradition from the United States to Japan and the whereabouts of Zayek are unclear.

The indictment says Taylor and Zayek put Ghosn "in a large musical instrument case" and then took him through security at Japan's Osaka airport.

They allegedly opened "70 holes at the bottom of the case for him to breathe easily."

The indictment says the plane landed at Istanbul’s Atatürk Airport and parked near another plane bound for Beirut.

MNG Jet's Kösemen then allegedly jumped off the Osaka plane and boarded the one destined for Beirut together with Ghosn.

The indictment says Kösemen received several payments into his bank account totaling 216,800 euros ($262,248) and $66,990 in the months before Ghosn’s flight.

He is also accused of being paid an unidentified amount after Ghosn’s arrival in Beirut.

Kösemen has denied being paid to help Ghosn escape while the pilots and flight attendants say they were unaware he was on board any of the plane’s flights.

MNG filed a complaint last year alleging its aircraft was used illegally.

It added at the time that one of its employees had admitted to falsifying the flight manifest to keep Ghosn off the passenger list.