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Warendorf Fraud Case Comes to an End: Settlement Reached

Westfalian - The legal battle in the Warendorf fraud case has come to an end. There has been no final verdict of guilt, but instead a settlement has been reached.

Former Warendorf state stud managing director Susanne Rimkus, head stable manager Peter Borggreve, and deputy director Bernhard Gerdemann, appealed the decision to Warendorf district court took a year ago in February 2019.

Fraud Case

On 10 February 2016 a raid of the offices at the Warendorf state stud was held following an anonymous tip. It was part of an investigation against the three suspects.

They turned out to have received gifts in the form of several trips to Qatar with their spouses in 2013 and 2014. They also signed a co-operation to sell horses and accept commission fees up to 86,000 euro. The trio had set up a separate company to handle these transactions.

Rimkus also accepted 18,000 euro into her private account for a deal with an American horse buyer. Of this amount, a Westfalian stallion owner paid 10,000 euro if his stallion would be licensed and sold to the American, while Borggreve would get 8000 euro commission fee. The stallion was subsequently leased and stood at stud in Warendorf. However, when the colt failed the performance test he was shipped to the U.S.A.

Please click here to read the rest of the article as it appears on the Eurodressage website.

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