Fugitive Danish IT chief surrenders to LA police

The head of a Danish software company who was sought by Interpol on alleged fraud and conspiracy charges turned himself in Saturday at a Los Angeles police station, according to a newspaper report.

Stein Bagger, CEO of Danish software and services company IT Factory, had not been seen since he disappeared Nov. 27 while on vacation with his wife and daughter in Dubai in the United Arab Emirates.

On Saturday morning he walked into a police station in downtown Los Angeles and said, “I am Stein Bagger. I’m a fugitive from Europe and I’m here to turn myself in,” according to a report in The Los Angeles Times.

Police were initially skeptical but took him more seriously after noticing his Armani suit and $65,000 Rolex wrist watch, the paper said. He was turned over to federal authorities Saturday night and held at the Metropolitan Detention Center.

Bagger told police he landed in New York from Dubai on Nov. 28, borrowed a friend’s credit card and Audi sports car and drove to Los Angeles. On Saturday morning he typed “police” into the car’s navigation system and turned himself in at the first police department that showed up on the list, the L.A. Times said.

It’s the latest twist in a drama that has made national headlines in Denmark over the past week.

IT Factory was an IBM business partner that provided hosted software services built on IBM’s Lotus platform. The company reported soaring revenue and profit for the past few years and Bagger was recently named Danish Entrepreneur of the Year by Ernst & Young.

Back in 2000, IT Factory’s fortunes seemd more rosier as it hoped to bring its success with building a collaborative software for Lotus Development Corp.’s Notes platform to Microsoft Corp.’s Exchange customers.

But last early last week, following investigative reports about the company by Computerworld Denmark, IT Factory filed for bankruptcy. Chairman Asger Jensby estimated that 90 per cent of the company’s turnover had been fictitious.

IT Factory allegedly created contracts for nonexistent products with companies that did not exist, and sold the contracts to banks and other investors. Denmark’s largest bank, Danske Bank, said on Tuesday that IT Factory has debts with it of 350 million Danish krone (US$60 million).

Bagger apparently went to some lengths to cover up the unfolding scandal. When questions were asked about the authenticity of a PhD he claimed to have received from a “San Francisco Technical University,” Bagger allegedly hired an American actress to pose as a university employee and verify his qualifications for reporters.

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Jim Love, Chief Content Officer, IT World Canada

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