Japanese carmaker Nissan wants to keep former Chairman Carlos Ghosn and his family from going back to their apartment in Copacabana for fear they would destroy evidence against the executive, The Financial Times reports.
Japanese carmaker Nissan wants to keep former Chairman Carlos Ghosn and his family from going back to their apartment in Copacabana for fear they would destroy evidence against the executive, The Financial Times reported.
The Times said, citing a person with knowledge of the dispute, that Nissan thinks a safe in the apartment contains evidence that Ghosn used funds from a Nissan subsidiary called Zi-A Capital to buy the residence.