The trustee accuses Victor Muller (Spyker) of bankruptcy fraud

The trustee accuses Victor Muller (Spyker) of bankruptcy fraud


The former CEO of sports car maker Spyker, Victor Muller, is said to be offering his creditors a discount on their claims if he pays them back. The administrator calls this behavior bankruptcy fraud and goes to court. According to Spyker’s former CEO, there is no legal objection to his offer.

Is there a Netflix series on the life of Victor Muller?

Is Netflix Netherlands still looking for a home series subject? A cross between the entrepreneurial spirit of the bird and the financial and legal circuses of A suit in Great Short? Then they no longer have to search. Whether the rights are available for free remains to be seen, but what is certain is that Victor Muller’s ventures have more than enough material for an action-packed drama series.

Guardian Steffens torturer to former CEO of Spyker Victor Muller

Where the TV viewer will soon start with the story of the book of the son of a tough lawyer who makes a lot of money by taking a clothing company on the stock market and then brings the oldest car in the country to life with shiny cars, in real life we ​​are. and less variable periods. Spyker, Saab: Muller has long lost its car factories. Champagne, pits, burning ball – the decorations of the Formula 1 circuit have been replaced by gray walls of offices and courtrooms where the leading roles are claimed by trustees, lawyers and a real torturer in the person of the curator Dennis Steffens. Spyker went bankrupt in 2014. In 2021 there was supposed to be a successful restart, but this attempt failed. The tough manager, who works with Van Diepen Van der Kroef Advocaten, has been looking for Muller for years to make sure he lives up to his financial obligations. Sometimes he gets caught, sometimes the sliding Muller manages to escape and Steffens has to pull the emergency brake. The latter now seems to be the case.

Victor Muller: the manager’s accusations are ‘nonsense’

Through the piece in it FD it turns out that Steffens wants to press charges against Muller. The administrator says that the former CEO defrauded his creditors by offering to buy their claims as long as a discount of tens of percent was given. In a letter to creditors, Steffens writes: ‘Spyker et al. and Mr Muller (…) are trying to get rid of bankruptcy cheaper, against the law (…). The manager has announced that he will press charges against Muller. Muller expects a possible trip to court without any worries. Inside of FD he calls the accusations ‘nonsense’. He continues to strive for full compensation from his creditors, he says, but nothing prevents him from suggesting that creditors sell their debts at a discount to one of his other companies. But can a seasoned Netflix watcher still follow this plot?