"You signed off this important document without reading it in its entirety?" Mr Cathcart asked.
"Absolutely," the former director replied.
As well as charges under the Securities Act, Petricevic and Roest face eight counts of knowingly making false statements in offer documents that Bridgecorp had never missed interest payments or repayments of principal to investors.
According to Crown evidence, Bridgecorp began missing payments to investors from February 7, 2007.
Petricevic stuck to his guns under cross-examination and said he was not aware Bridgecorp missed maturities payments until he read it in the newspaper after the company went into receivership.
When Bridgecorp collapsed in July 2007, 14,500 investors were owed $459 million and are now likely to receive less than 10 cents in the dollar back.
Despite receiving a report in April 2007 saying the company had missed maturities payments, Petricevic said he dismissed the document because its author was a "very new junior employee". The former managing director admitted yesterday the report was right and he regretted not following the issue up but did not believe he acted carelessly.
He denied suggestions that Roest - Bridgecorp's former finance director - informed him of missed payments in regular weekly meetings.
"Do you find it extraordinary that all these other people knowing [and] all this documentary material showing missed maturities payments that you don't know anything about it until after the receivership?" Mr Cathcart asked.
"At the time I was not told, the rest of the directors were not told, certainly if they were, they did not [tell] me," Petricevic replied.
When asked outright if investors were lied to the director said: "Investors were number one ... there was no lying done on my part to any investor." Cross-examination of Petricevic is expected to finish today.
Following that, Roest and Steigrad are due to give evidence in their own defence.
The trio on trial deny all the charges against them.