Calgary Herald

Sweden mulls appealing decision in bribery case to acquit Bombardier staff

- The Associated Press

A Swedish prosecutor says he is considerin­g appealing Wednesday’s acquittal of a Russian employee in the Swedish branch of train maker Bombardier for aggravated bribery in one of the country’s biggest corruption cases to date.

“We’ll definitely consider that at this point,” Thomas Forsberg said from Stockholm.

Prosecutor­s have three weeks to decide whether to appeal the court decision, but will likely make a decision by next week, he said.

The Stockholm District Court said “it could not be proven” that Evgeny Pavlov, an employee of Bombardier Transporta­tion Sweden AB, “has promised or offered an unfair advantage, which is a prerequisi­te for the existence of a bribe.”

Pavlov had been accused of bribery to win a contract for a signalling system with a contract value of around US$340 million. He was facing a six-year jail sentence and deportatio­n.

In a statement, Bombardier said it was “pleased with the outcome” in court. “Bombardier had always denied any allegation of criminal wrongdoing, and we are happy to see the court’s conclusion­s in this regard,” spokesman Simon Letendre wrote in an email.

In 2013, Bombardier was part of a consortium awarded a contract to supply signalling equipment for a 500-kilometre track along a corridor connecting Asia and Europe to Azerbaijan Railways.

“He has been acquitted. This is really positive,” his lawyer Cristina Bergner told The Associated Press, adding she had not been able to speak to her client yet. When Pavlov was released Oct. 4 after seven months in jail, “we knew he would be acquitted.”

He was arrested in March and ordered held in pre-trial custody to prevent him from fleeing or tampering with evidence. Emails seized in October 2016 during a search of Bombardier offices in Sweden were considered evidence in the case.

Bergner had repeatedly said her client is innocent.

The court said prosecutor­s “have not proved that … there was expectatio­n that the official would affect the railway authority in the procuremen­t.”

Forsberg said he was more surprised than disappoint­ed by the verdict.

He said the preliminar­y investigat­ion is still ongoing and charges against others could still be laid next year.

“We will continue our efforts investigat­ing this in localities and any other people from Bombardier who might be involved,” he added.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? A Swedish court found Wednesday that “it could not be proven” that Evgeny Pavlov, an employee of Bombardier’s Swedish unit, had committed bribery to win a contract.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES A Swedish court found Wednesday that “it could not be proven” that Evgeny Pavlov, an employee of Bombardier’s Swedish unit, had committed bribery to win a contract.

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