Dispute with Dmitry Rybolovlev In 2015, Russian billionaire Dmitry Rybolovlev accused Yves Bouvier of defrauding him out of nearly $1 billion via the sale of artwork at inflated prices while he was employed as a consultant and was receiving a commission of 2 per cent on the value of each purchase. Bouvier has denied all claims, stating that he presented himself as the seller of the artwork, rather than an adviser and that the 2 percent fee related to the transportation, storage and certification service that he provided. Yves Bouvier met Rybolovlev for the first time in 2003, when he came to see him for the occasion of the delivery of the
Marc Chagall painting,
Le Cirque. Tania Rappo, a friend of the Rybolovlev family, organized the purchase of Marc Chagall's
Le Cirque painting for $6 million. When the painting arrived at the premises of Natural Le Coultre, located in the Geneva freeport, the canvas did not have a certificate of authenticity guaranteeing that the artwork was an original. Rybolovlev feared he had been scammed, but Bouvier acquired the certificate a few days later and requested Rappo to organize a meeting with the Rybolovlev at their home in
Cologny. Rybolovlev did not know then that the Finatrading company, which had sold him the Chagall, was in fact the property of Yves Bouvier. Bouvier promised Rappo that he would give her a commission for every work sold to Rybolovlev, for introducing him to the billionaire. Bouvier subsequently acquired a total of 38 artworks between 2003 and 2014 for Rybolovlev, including
Vincent van Gogh,
Pablo Picasso and
Amedeo Modigliani. In February 2015, Bouvier was arrested in Monaco on suspicion of defrauding Dmitry Rybolovlev. Bouvier was released on a €10 million bail. He was accused of fraud as a result of excessive margins on the sale of paintings, such as on
Leonardo da Vinci's Salvator Mundi with a margin of €50 million. Rybolovlev learned from a
New York Times article that the painting had been sold for $75 million in 2013, although he had paid Bouvier $127.5 million for it. Rybolovlev also accused Jean-Marc Peretti and Tania Rappo of being involved in the fraudulent dealings surrounding the art sales. Both Peretti and Rappo reportedly earned significant commissions as part of these transactions. Rappo, who was a close friend of Bouvier, was allegedly involved in facilitating the deals, while Peretti, a former manager of a Parisian gaming club who became associated with money laundering investigations, played a crucial role in the negotiations, particularly for high-value pieces as Salvador Mundi. Bouvier himself acknowledged Peretti's talent as a negotiator, often comparing his skills to playing poker. Bouvier also called for an investigation into
HSBC’s provision of a letter to Monaco police that falsely stated that he and a co-defendant in a money laundering case, Tania Rappo, shared an account at the bank. HSBC responded that this was a simple and clerical mistake. In March 2015, Singapore's High Court ordered the global freezing of Bouvier's assets, but it was reported that the assets were unfrozen in August of that year on the grounds that Rybolovlev's approach constituted an abuse of process. In November 2015, Rybolovlev and his lawyer Tetiana Bersheda were briefly placed in custody in Monaco following a complaint filed by Tania Rappo. Rappo accused Rybolovlev’s lawyer of invasion of privacy. Bersheda earlier recorded a private conversation during a private dinner with Rappo and Rybolovlev, in an attempt to prove that Rappo was Yves Bouvier’s accomplice. Rappo also accused Dmitry Rybolovlev and Monaco’s former public prosecutor, Jean-Pierre Dreno, of the collusion. In March 2016, the High Court of Singapore dismissed Bouvier's attempt to suspend the civil suit filed in the territory, but the case was transferred to the Singapore International Commercial Court, which deals specifically with cross-border commercial disputes. In May 2016, Bouvier's lawyers filed an appeal against the High Court's ruling, arguing the case should be heard in Switzerland rather than Singapore. In March 2016, following the lead of European authorities, US Federal prosecutors opened an investigation into Bouvier, whom they described as "one of the art world’s consummate insiders." In April 2016, Bouvier entered a new phase of his campaign to clear his name by hiring global PR group, CNC Communications & Network Consulting, part of French giant
Publicis Groupe. On 18 April 2017, the Singapore Court of Appeal overturned the High Court's decision, ruling that the case should be heard in Switzerland and ordering the action in Singapore to be stayed. At the beginning of 2017, in the context of her defence, Tetiana Bersheda handed over her mobile phone to the Monaco police to allow the offending recording to be examined. Bersheda maintained that the recording concerned a professional conversation and was therefore authorized by Monegasque law. In July 2017, Monaco’s investigative magistrate at the time received a comprehensive IT report of the contents of Tetiana Bersheda’s phone. It contained over 8,900 text messages that revealed communication between Rybolovlev’s lawyer and Monaco’s high-level officials prior to Bouvier’s arrest. In September 2017, a case against Rybolovlev was opened in Monaco for corruption and influence peddling. In June 2018, the US investigation against Bouvier was closed without any charges made against the art dealer. In February 2018, a federal prosecutor in Geneva opened a criminal investigation into Yves Bouvier on charges of fraud against Dmitry Rybolovlev. However, in December 2023, the Geneva Prosecutor's Office closed the criminal investigation into Bouvier, stating that it had found "no evidence to raise sufficient suspicions against the defendants." All nine lawsuits filed by Rybolovlev in Singapore, Hong Kong, New York, Monaco, and Geneva against Bouvier were dismissed. In June 2018, the US investigation against Bouvier was closed without any charges made against the art dealer. In July 2019, Rybolovlev and Bersheda appealed to the
European Court of Human Rights claiming that the investigating judge in Monaco had exceeded his remit with regard to the invasion of privacy case. In November 2023, the case against Rybolovlev and Monaco’s former public prosecutor, Jean-Pierre Dreno, who were accused by Tania Rappo of collusion in her complaint of breach of privacy, was dismissed. In December 2023, Rybolovlev and Bouvier reached an agreement and set aside all their remaining legal disputes in all jurisdictions. The settlement was described by Bouvier's lawyers as a "complete victory." In June 2024, the European Court of Human Rights ruled that the investigating judge and other Monegasque authorities had acted illegally against Tetiana Bersheda, Dmitry Rybolovlev’s lawyer. In March 2024, Tetiana Bersheda was cleared of any wrongdoing in the case brough by Tania Rappo for invasion of privacy.
Role of Sotheby’s Rybolovlev also accused auction house
Sotheby's of being complicit in Bouvier's alleged defrauding scheme. According to Rybolovlev, Sotheby’s was involved in his purchase through Bouvier of 15 masterpieces, including “Salvator Mundi” of Leonardo da Vinci, which was originally bought by Bouvier from Sotheby’s for $83 million and sold to Rybolovlev a day later for $127,5 million. The Russian subsequently accused Sotheby's of having knowingly and willingly assisted in the fraud. According to the files, the process involved a request from Yves Bouvier for Valette to send an evaluation approved by Sotheby's which was to be transferred to Rybolovlev, indicating that Bouvier and Valette apparently coordinated on the value of the appraisals which Bouvier then sent to his client. In November 2019, the New York Court of Appeals decided that Sotheby's had to provide documents requested in the context of proceedings initiated by foreign jurisdictions in which the auction house is involved, including for proceedings between Yves Bouvier and Dmitry Rybolovlev in Switzerland. In March 2023, a U.S. District Court judge allowed the jury trial to proceed regarding the four works, namely
Salvador Mundi by da Vinci, Rene Magritte’s
Le Domaine d’Arnheim and
Gustav Klimt’s
Wasserschlangen II, as well Amedeo Modigliani’s
Tête. In January 2024, the jury at a New York Federal Court found for Sotheby's on all counts that Rybolovlev had alleged. A lawyer representing Sotheby's stated that the verdict "reaffirmed what we knew since the beginning, which was that Sotheby's played no role in any fraud or attempted fraud against Rybolovlev or anyone else." Sotheby’s legal team, however, described Bouvier’s tactics in the following manner, saying that “he would sell the art to Rybolovlev at marked-up prices, and tell Rybolovlev fabricated stories about hard-fought negotiations with the original sellers that supposedly drove up the prices”. Bouvier stated that his "name is now cleared", adding that the Geneva Prosecutor's decision to dismiss the case marked the "end of a nine-year nightmare. Courts all around the world have now unanimously concluded that I was innocent."
Other cases Bouvier was connected to a legal case involving a Canadian collector named Lorette Shefner in 2008. Shefner's family claims that she was the victim of a complex fraud, whereby she was persuaded to sell a
Soutine painting at a price far below market value, only to see the work later sold to the
National Gallery of Art in
Washington DC for a much higher price. According to New York court papers from 2013, Bouvier was accused of having conspired "to disguise the true ownership" of pieces of art to defraud the Shefner estate. In a separate incident, Bouvier's purported connections to Galerie Jacques de la Béraudière and his ownership of an off-shore entity called Diva Fine Arts led him to be connected to the case of
Wolfgang Beltracchi, a German
forger convicted in 2011 of defrauding a number of collectors, including
Daniel Filipacchi, of millions of dollars. According to a media report, Bouvier came first in contact with Beltracchi via his wife Helene, to whom he was introduced through art expert Werner Spies, who had authenticated one of Beltracchi's paintings before they were sold on. Bouvier has denied any connection to Beltracchi and has dismissed media coverage as uninformed speculation. In 30 March 2012, the Beijing office of one of Bouvier's subsidiary firms, art transporter IFAS, was raided by local tax authorities, leading to the arrest of several employees, including the general manager Nils Jennrich. Through his lawyer, Bouvier contested having affiliation with the company. With the efforts of German diplomats, Jennrich was released and returned to Germany in 2013, and the case was closed as well as the charges dropped. In September 2015, Bouvier was indicted on charges of concealed theft of two
Picassos belonging to Catherine Hutin-Blay, step-daughter of Picasso, who claims that they were stolen from her collection. Bouvier countered this by showing that Hutin-Blay had received 8 million euros through a
Liechtensteiner trust linked to their sale, leading to the case being dismissed in Liechtenstein in December 2015. However, in 2024, a French court reopened the case following new evidence. It suggested Bouvier had used questionable tactics to sell additional Picasso artworks without Hutin-Blay's consent. The court's decision highlighted suspicions about Bouvier's methods, which allegedly included misleading valuations and complex intermediary arrangements to obscure the true ownership and inflate the prices of artworks. The decision followed the assessment that no verifiable documentation had been provided to support the lawful acquisition of the artworks in question. His associate Olivier Thomas was also referred to trial on related charges, including breach of trust. Bouvier has denied the allegations. Bouvier and an associate, Marc Francelet, were also allegedly involved in helping former
president of Angola,
Jose Eduardo dos Santos, funnel Angolan state funds out of the country. According to Angolan press reports and French court documents, Bouvier and Francelet used two
shell companies, Brave Ventures Pte Ltd and Francelet Consulting, to make the state funds disappear.
Panama Papers In the 2015
leak, it was revealed that Bouvier had at least five offshore companies linked to him. A lawyer for Bouvier stated these are used for well-established legal purposes.
Alleged tax evasion In 2017, the Swiss Federal Tax Administration (FTA) initiated an investigation into Bouvier for tax evasion to the tune of CHF 165 million ($145 million) stemming mostly from income received through art deals with Rybolovlev and proceeds from companies in Hong Kong and the
Virgin Islands that are allegedly tied to him. In June 2019, the FTA was granted access to documents seized during office raids, following Bouvier's attempt of blocking them. On 3 August 2020, Switzerland's Federal Criminal Court ruled that some of the documents in question must be inspected, which subsequently led the authorities to accuse Bouvier of owing taxes on CHF 330 million ($360 million). At the core of the case is Bouvier's assertion that he has been a Singapore resident for the past decade and thus does not owe Swiss taxes on profits made since then. In 2024 he was ordered by a Swiss federal court to pay 730 million swiss francs ($821 million) in unpaid taxes to the canton of Geneva for the years 2008 to 2015. The ruling found that Bouvier, despite claiming fiscal residence in Singapore, where he moved to 2009, spent most of the time in Geneva during the period in question.
Scherbakov case In 2018, another Russian businessman, who according to artnet news emerged to be Vladimir Shcherbakov filed a lawsuit against Yves Bouvier and his associate Thierry Hobaica, who according to media reports Bouvier had engaged to deal with Scherbakov. The Russian accused them of overcharging him in the purchase of 40 artworks, which were allegedly acquired through offshore firms owned by Bouvier. == Personal life ==