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Didier Reynders interrogated by police on suspicion of years of money laundering through National Lottery games

Didier Reynders was questioned by the federal police until late in the evening on Tuesday. Detectives also raided various addresses, including his private home, the public prosecutor’s office confirmed after reporting The evening in Follow The Money.

Reynders, who was EU Commissioner for Justice until last weekend, is suspected by the court of money laundering through the purchase of games of chance, it has been reported. The evening in Follow The Money heard. The facts are said to have taken place over a period of several years.

The police carried out searches at various addresses linked to the MR politician on Tuesday morning and Reynders was interrogated until late in the evening on Tuesday, without being deprived of his freedom. The searches are part of an investigation into money laundering that has been going on for months. Investigators waited to strike until Reynders’ term as EU commissioner expired on Sunday, causing him to lose his immunity.

Reynders is suspected of laundering money through the National Lottery, for which he was responsible as Minister of Finance between 2007 and 2011. The facts are said to have taken place over several years, but not when the National Lottery was still under his powers.

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He allegedly used cash to purchase electronic National Lottery tickets that he could transfer to an online Lottery account. He allegedly participated in lottery games and deposited the proceeds into a digital account of the former minister. These would then have been transferred to his private account. The money laundering is said to have taken place over a long period of time, but not when he was still responsible for the National Lottery.

The Belgian public prosecutor’s office is said to have been tipped off by the National Lottery and the Belgian Cell for Financial Information Processing (CFI), where transactions can be reported that could be linked to money laundering or the financing of terrorism.

Didier Reynders was not immediately available for comment. He has been a political heavyweight for years. He was Minister of Finance between 1999 and 2011 and Minister of Foreign Affairs until 2019. If an investigating judge wanted to arrest him or bring the case to court, this would require a vote in the House, writes The evening. The Brussels Public Prosecutor’s Office points out that the presumption of innocence applies in full.

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