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    1. Home
    2. >Finance
    3. >Exclusive-Hiscox manager faces Greek perjury charge over extradition case
    Finance

    Exclusive-Hiscox Manager Faces Greek Perjury Charge Over Extradition Case

    Published by Global Banking & Finance Review®

    Posted on March 20, 2026

    4 min read

    Last updated: March 20, 2026

    Exclusive-Hiscox manager faces Greek perjury charge over extradition case - Finance news and analysis from Global Banking & Finance Review
    Tags:FinanceBankingMarkets

    Quick Summary

    A manager at insurer Hiscox is charged in Greece with providing false testimony during extradition proceedings over the 2019–2020 extradition of ex-CFO Yuval Abraham. The case stems from a long-running cross-border legal battle involving alleged embezzlement, whistleblower retaliation claims, and as

    Table of Contents

    • Overview of the Hiscox Extradition and Perjury Case
    • Legal Proceedings and Defense Arguments
    • Whistleblower Retaliation and Political Involvement
    • Alleged Swiss Watch Fraud
    • Claims of Tax Fraud and Embezzlement
    • Details of the Alleged Embezzlement
    • Worldwide Asset Freezes
    • Court Judgments and Asset Freezing Orders
    • Arrest and Extradition Attempts
    • Financial Context

    Hiscox Manager Charged with Perjury in Greek Extradition Case Involving Ex-CFO

    Overview of the Hiscox Extradition and Perjury Case

    ATHENS/LONDON, March 20 (Reuters) - A manager at London-listed insurer Hiscox faces a criminal charge of providing false testimony during an attempted extradition of a former colleague from Greece to Bermuda, court proceedings and filings seen by Reuters show.

    An Athens prosecutor alleges the manager, who cannot be named under Greek law, submitted false evidence in 2019 and 2020 that was sent to Greece to support a request from Bermuda for the extradition of Yuval Abraham, a former CFO of Bermuda-based Hiscox unit Hiscox Services Ltd (HSL), court filings show. 

    The Greek case, which has not been previously reported, follows whistleblower retaliation claims and an eight-year pursuit of Abraham by Hiscox through courts in Bermuda, Britain, the United States, South Africa and Greece over allegations he embezzled about $1.8 million to buy luxury Swiss watches.

    Legal Proceedings and Defense Arguments

    A lawyer for the Hiscox manager told an Athens court hearing on March 4 that his client denied wrongdoing and that the case should be struck out because a court summons had been served in Greek rather than English.

    "The entirety of what (my client) has testified as part of the extradition process ... corresponds to the truth," the manager's defence lawyer Ioannis Androulakis told the judge.

    The manager faces a misdemeanour charge of giving false testimony, punishable by a fine and up to three years in prison.

    Bermuda-headquartered Hiscox, one of the largest members of the Lloyd's of London commercial insurance market, declined to comment on the case. 

    Whistleblower Retaliation and Political Involvement

    Zoe Konstantopoulou, a lawyer representing Abraham who is also leader of a political party, told Greece's parliament in May 2025 that her client was a "victim of a very serious corruption case".

    Konstantopoulou told the court on March 4 that Abraham had been a "very promising, senior executive" who was framed after refusing to turn a blind eye to tax law violations at work.

    The next hearing in the case, which was prompted by a lawsuit filed in 2021 by Abraham against the manager, is due on April 21. 

    Alleged Swiss Watch Fraud

    Claims of Tax Fraud and Embezzlement

    Abraham alleges, without citing evidence, that he stumbled across a fraud in 2017 that resulted in "astronomical profits" from the non-payment of tax owed to other, unidentified states. 

    As a result, Abraham refused to sign off on the 2017 annual accounts of a Hiscox subsidiary, that lawsuit shows. 

    Reuters could not independently verify Abraham's account.

    Hiscox declined to comment on the tax fraud allegations.

    Details of the Alleged Embezzlement

    Three Hiscox subsidiaries, including HSL, alleged Abraham used fake invoices for sham consulting services to siphon cash from Hiscox accounts to buy luxury watches and accessories between June 2017 and February 2018, court filings and public judgments in Bermuda and London show.

    Abraham, a 45-year-old citizen of Israel, South Africa and Poland who was fired in 2018, denied wrongdoing in the 2021 counterclaim, alleging that the case against him was designed to silence him after he blew the whistle internally.

    Referring the case to trial, the Greek prosecutor said Abraham had not committed fraud, had not supervised the invoices and payments he had been accused of procuring and did not have sole authority to sign such transactions, court documents show.

    Worldwide Asset Freezes

    Court Judgments and Asset Freezing Orders

    HSL, Hiscox Agency and Hiscox Insurance Company (Bermuda) secured a civil, summary judgment in Bermuda's Supreme Court against Abraham in October 2018. 

    This ordered him to pay about $1.5 million and 334,000 Swiss francs ($427,600), plus interest, public judgments show. Courts in Bermuda, New York and London also imposed asset-freezing orders in 2018 and 2019, public judgments show.

    Arrest and Extradition Attempts

    In July 2019, police in Bermuda said Abraham had absconded before he could be seized on charges of obtaining money transfers by deception, false accounting, money laundering and other offences.       

    Abraham was arrested at Athens airport in August 2019 on an Interpol Red Notice, court documents show.       

    He spent nearly 12 months in a high-security jail, from where he sought asylum in Greece, before the Greek justice ministry declared in 2021 that Bermuda had no power to request his extradition, legal filings show. 

    Financial Context

    ($1 = 0.7494 pounds)

    ($1 = 0.7811 Swiss francs)     

    (Reporting by Renee Maltezou in Athens and Kirstin Ridley in London, additional reporting by Scott Vincent and Stefania Spezzati; Editing by Elisa Martinuzzi, Tommy Reggiori Wilkes and Alexander Smith)

    Key Takeaways

    • •A Hiscox manager has been criminally charged in Greece with perjury for allegedly submitting false evidence during the 2019–2020 extradition request concerning Yuval Abraham (royalgazette.com).
    • •The underlying dispute involves allegations that Abraham embezzled approximately $1.8 million using fake invoices to purchase luxury watches, prompting Hiscox subsidiaries to seek his extradition from multiple jurisdictions (royalgazette.com).
    • •Abraham, who holds multiple citizenships and has made whistleblower retaliation claims, denies wrongdoing and argues he was framed after refusing to ignore internal tax misconduct. He also filed a 2021 counterclaim in the case (kkc.com).

    References

    • Bermuda CFO arrested in Greece - The Royal Gazette | Bermuda News, Business, Sports, Events, & Community |
    • Greek Whistleblower Law · Report Fraud · Kohn, Kohn & Colapinto LLP

    Frequently Asked Questions about Exclusive-Hiscox manager faces Greek perjury charge over extradition case

    1Why is the Hiscox manager facing a perjury charge in Greece?

    The Hiscox manager is accused of providing false testimony in the extradition case of Yuval Abraham, a former Hiscox CFO, according to Athens court filings.

    2What are the allegations against Yuval Abraham in the Hiscox case?

    Abraham is accused by Hiscox subsidiaries of embezzling about $1.8 million using fake invoices to buy luxury Swiss watches.

    3How did the Greek courts become involved in the Hiscox-Abraham case?

    Greek courts are involved due to Abraham's arrest in Athens on an Interpol Red Notice and subsequent extradition proceedings requested by Bermuda.

    4Did Hiscox comment on the perjury or tax fraud allegations?

    Hiscox declined to comment on both the ongoing perjury case and the tax fraud allegations mentioned by Abraham.

    5What was the outcome of the initial civil proceedings against Abraham?

    Bermuda’s Supreme Court ordered Abraham to pay about $1.5 million and 334,000 Swiss francs, plus interest, after the asset-freezing orders in 2018 and 2019.

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