Carlos Ghosn freed from jail after four months
Vows to fight 'these meritless and unsubstantiated accusations'
Vows to fight 'these meritless and unsubstantiated accusations'
He could be freed Wednesday under many restrictions, $8.9 million bail.
He goes on offense against Nissan and Japanese prosecutors.
Promises stronger defense and 'shedding light on the circumstances that led to my unjust detention'
Discovers it paid for a let-them-eat-wedding-cake reception at Versailles.
Nissan execs dead-set against closer Renault ties were bent on 'getting rid of me'
He'll likely remain in jail until his trial in six months or more.
France, meanwhile, wants Nissan and Renault to fully merge.
He'll likely be incarcerated until he stands trial, and prosecutor says, 'He will be guilty.'
In spite of the accusations, 'I have a genuine love and appreciation for Nissan'
He'll stay in jail now, though he'd been expected out after a favorable court ruling.
He could be released Friday: 'Things as they stand are absolutely unacceptable'
Alliance strained by distinctly different views of Carlos Ghosn.
TOKYO — The surprise arrest of Nissan's former chairman on charges of falsifying financial reports is providing a window into possible corporate intrigue at the Japanese automaker. Japanese media and some analysts have raised the possibility that the charges against Carlos Ghosn were engineered to sideline him and give Nissan an excuse to end a lopsided alliance with French automaker Renault SA. "What is fascinating about this story is the politics of it," said Egor Matv
Nissan eager to share findings on Ghosn, sources say.
Ghosn, another executive and Nissan itself were formally charged today.