'Crocodile Dundee' hunts missing $34 million | Inquirer Entertainment

‘Crocodile Dundee’ hunts missing $34 million

/ 12:14 PM April 15, 2013

SYDNEY – “Crocodile Dundee” star Paul Hogan has taken legal action in a US court to recover US$34 million held in a Swiss bank account which he alleged has been misappropriated, reports said Monday.

The Australian, who was catapulted to stardom by the success of the 1986 film about the laconic, knife-wielding crocodile hunter, said his once-trusted tax advisor has disappeared with the cash.

The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Californian district court documents allege Philip Egglishaw “absconded with or spent all” of Hogan’s millions, in a filing by the actor’s representative, Schuyler “Sky” Moore.

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The money was held at the Corner Bank in Lausanne, run by the Geneva firm Strachans which was retained to arrange a series of offshore trusts dealing with his lucrative Crocodile Dundee earnings, The Australian newspaper said.

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Egglishaw was a partner at the firm.

Last year Hogan confidentially settled an eight-year long dispute against the Australian Tax Office allegedly worth millions of dollars.

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The authorities had been pursuing him and his collaborator John Cornell for more than Aus$150 million ($156 million) in allegedly unpaid taxes, penalties and interest stretching back to the 1980s.

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Egglishaw was reportedly the mastermind behind the tax evasion scheme and an arrest warrant is current against him relating to these charges.

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Hogan’s US lawyer Craig Emanuel told the Herald: “For a variety of ethical reasons, I am not available to comment on your inquiries.”

The actor’s Australian lawyer, Andrew Robinson, declined to comment on the case to The Australian newspaper.

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TAGS: Celebrities, Entertainment, Judiciary

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