UK entrepreneur Mike Lynch has misplaced a bid to dam his extradition to the US the place he faces felony fraud costs.
A High Court in London heard the problem after then-home secretary, Priti Patel, permitted Dr Lynch's extradition in January final 12 months, to reply to 17 fraud costs over the sale of his software program firm, Autonomy, to Hewlett-Packard (HP) in 2011.
HP acquired the corporate for $11.1bn billion (Β£8.3bn) greater than a decade in the past. Dr Lynch was then accused of intentionally overstating the worth of his enterprise earlier than it was acquired by the American expertise large.
He has all the time denied any wrongdoing - having made $800m (Β£644m) from the deal - and argued after the extradition ruling that he was being made a "scapegoat" for mismanagement by HP.
On Friday, Lord Justice Lewis and Mr Justice Julian Knowles dominated that none of Dr Lynch's grounds of enchantment towards the extradition ruling have been "arguable".
Read extra:Business figures foyer Sunak over extraditionMike Lynch loses $5bn fraud case
"The applicant's extradition has been sought⦠so that he can stand trial in California for fraud," the 2 judges stated in a written ruling.
"The American prosecutors have described the case as 'one of the largest frauds ever prosecuted by the United States Department of Justice'.
"The worth of the alleged fraud runs into the billions of {dollars}."
They stated that the fees stay as allegations, and would should be proved within the occasion of a trial.
A spokesman for Dr Lynch stated: "Dr Lynch is very disappointed, but is reviewing the judgment and will continue to explore his options to appeal, including to the European Court of Human Rights."
Dr Lynch misplaced a multibillion-dollar fraud motion after HP sued him and Autonomy's former chief monetary officer, Sushovan Hussain, for about $5bn (Β£3.7 billion).
A High Court choose in January discovered that HP had "substantially" succeeded in its bitter civil case however indicated that the US agency would get significantly lower than the quantity it had sought in damages - the quantity is but to be determined.
In February, a gaggle of entrepreneurs together with Brent Hoberman, the co-founder of Lastminute.com, and FTSE-100 boardroom veterans reminiscent of Lord Stevenson of Coddenham, signed a letter to Rishi Sunak complaining about US authorities' "unreasonable" use of an extradition treaty.
They described the motion as "deeply worrying to anyone running a business in the UK".
Content Source: information.sky.com
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