Bookmark Jamaica-Gleaner.com
Go-Jamaica Gleaner Classifieds Discover Jamaica Youth Link Jamaica
Business Directory Go Shopping inns of jamaica Local Communities

Home
Lead Stories
News
Business
Sport
Commentary
Letters
Entertainment
Profiles in Medicine
The Star
E-Financial Gleaner
Overseas News
The Voice
Communities
Hospitality Jamaica
Google
Web
Jamaica- gleaner.com

Archives
1998 - Now (HTML)
1834 - Now (PDF)
Services
Find a Jamaican
Careers
Library
Power 106FM
Weather
Subscriptions
News by E-mail
Newsletter
Print Subscriptions
Interactive
Chat
Dating & Love
Free Email
Guestbook
ScreenSavers
Submit a Letter
WebCam
Weekly Poll
About Us
Advertising
Gleaner Company
Contact Us
Other News
Stabroek News

US$100m in fines against firms for foreign bribery
published: Wednesday | December 26, 2007


Companies paying foreign government officials in a bid to secure contracts has emerged as one of the fastest growing targets for prosecutors and stock market regulators in the hunt for fraud, according to Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission officials.

This year the U.S. government has collected more than US$100 million in penalties from oil, chemical and telecommunications companies and secured five guilty pleas from corporate executives. The number of foreign bribery cases filed by criminal and civil investigators in the United States has more than doubled since 2004.

"There's been more prosecutions in the last three years than probably the history of the statute," said Joseph Warin, a longtime Washington corporate defence lawyer and former prosecutor.

Among the forces fuelling the trend are the increasingly global reach of business and reforms ushered in after the last round of U.S. corporate scandals, which are prompting executives to dig deeper into their operations to find wrongdoing and turn themselves in, hoping for leniency. U.S. law enforcement, meanwhile, is marshalling more resources in a bid to level the playing field for companies competing against foreign rivals.

An industrywide probe

Nearly a dozen energy companies are under investigation for alleged payoffs to Nigerian customs officials, and the giant insurance broker Aon recently told investors it had received a subpoena seeking information about its foreign operations, part of what it called an industry-wide probe.

Authorities in the United States and Germany are negotiating with Daimler to resolve allegations that the automaker paid foreign officials to win business in Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe.

In all, nearly 60 more federal cases are in the pipeline, according to defence lawyers who make a living by fending off such inquiries the numbers remain small as a percentage of the government's corporate fraud case list, they represent a significant increase in the number of new cases and have become a priority of top law enforcers.

For the first time, the FBI is devoting five agents in the Washington field office solely to enforce the Watergate-era law called the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, noted Mark F. Mendelsohn, the prosecutor who oversees the initiative.

The law gives prosecutors the authority to target U.S. companies and their subsidiaries, as well as foreign businesses whose stock trades on American exchanges. In a recent speech, Assistant U.S. Attorney-General Alice S. Fisher said th oversight is part of a "strategic and deliberate plan" to intensify scrutiny of improper business tactics that can breed corruption and even political unrest.

The issue has been sensitive for American companies because other countries, including France, Japan and Italy, only recently began prosecuting corporate bribes to foreign officials. Until a decade ago, bribes were tax deductible in many European countries.

Britain a source of contention

Britain has yet to bring a successful bribery prosecution, a source of contention for U.S. executives and government leaders. The country has dropped a hot-potato case involving decades of allegedly improper payments by defence contractor BAE Systems to Saudi officials.

Amid the outcry, the U.S. Justice Department opened its own probe of BAE. Among the items in investigators' sights is a Washington bank account controlled by former ambassador Prince Bandar bin Sultan, according to lawyers following the case.

But if Britain has yet to throw its weight behind anti-bribery efforts, the same cannot be said for Germany. A massive, ongoing investigation by German authorities of more than $1 billion in allegedly improper payments by the engineering conglomerate Siemens means "the risk of prosecution has expanded greatly because it's not just the U.S.," said Philip Urofsky, a Washington defence lawyer who prosecuted such cases during his stint at the Justice Department in the 1990s.

Lawyers involved in the cases attribute the growth spurt to a steep increase in companies that are turning themselves in to prosecutors when employees or auditors flag questionable overseas payments. Companies that cooperate with prosecutors are supposed to receive leniency - an incentive for them to come forward. One was Tyco International, which last year agreed to pay $50 million to settle a civil case over cash and gifts its Brazilian and South Korean employees lavished on authorities to win construction and water business.

LA Times - Washington Post

More Business



Print this Page

Letters to the Editor

Most Popular Stories







© Copyright 1997-2007 Gleaner Company Ltd.
Contact Us | Privacy Policy | Disclaimer | Letters to the Editor | Suggestions | Add our RSS feed
Home - Jamaica Gleaner