Montreal Gazette

Snc-lavalin hires compliance officer to oversee ethics

Two former executives facing fraud charges

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Troubled Montreal engineerin­g giant SNC-Lavalin has hired a former Siemens executive to guide the company on ethics and matters of corporate governance.

Andreas Pohlmann will begin his job as chief compliance officer March 1, SNC-Lavalin said Friday.

Former SNC CEO Pierre Duhaime and another former top executive, Riadh Ben Aissa, are facing fraud charges stemming from a contract involving the building of the multibilli­on-dollar McGill University Health Centre in Montreal.

Pohlmann has more than two decades of experience in compliance, governance, public and government­al affairs, and as corporate counsel in the U.S. and abroad.

He was the chief compliance officer at Siemens AG, and oversaw the creation and implementa­tion of its compliance and corporate governance system.

“We are extremely pleased to have someone of Andreas’s calibre join our team as we work toward developing the best standards possible at SNC-Lavalin,” president and CEO Robert Card said.

“In addition, he has lived through experience­s similar to ours, albeit on a different scale, so we are confident that his expertise will serve us well in the months to come as we move beyond the past and towards the type of worldclass compliance system that he helped install at Siemens,” Card said.

Duhaime was relieved of his duties in March 2012 after an independen­t review showed he signed off on $56 million in payments to undisclose­d agents. The company called his abrupt departure a “retirement.”

Duhaime was arrested last November by Quebec’s anti-corruption squad.

Ben Aissa was arrested in April 2012 in Switzerlan­d and is awaiting a trial there on charges relating to alleged corruption, fraud and money laundering in North Africa — a region where SNC-Lavalin also has major operations.

 ?? KEYSTONE PRESS FILES ?? SNC-Lavalin wants to create “the best standards possible,” its CEO says.
KEYSTONE PRESS FILES SNC-Lavalin wants to create “the best standards possible,” its CEO says.

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