Toronto Star

SNC-Lavalin sues 2 former executives

$127.2M lawsuit filed against departed senior employees, associates for alleged fraud

- ROSS MAROWITS THE CANADIAN PRESS

MONTREAL— SNC-Lavalin has filed a lawsuit seeking to recover more than $127 million that it alleges was embezzled by two former senior executives and their associates.

The embattled engineerin­g and constructi­on firm is seeking payment mainly from former constructi­on vice-presidents Riadh Ben Aissa and Sami Bebawi.

In a motion to institute proceeding­s in Quebec Superior Court, SNCLavalin said $127.2 million was “fraudulent­ly diverted . . . and thereafter distribute­d to or for the benefit of the defendants Ben Aissa and Bebawi as well as to their respective friends, families and related legal entities.”

The alleged incidents occurred between 2001and 2011and relate to two major constructi­on projects in Libya, an airport and a water diversion.

SNC is claiming money that it says was tied to the projects but allegedly funnelled to entities registered in the British Virgin Islands and Panama that were secretly owned by Ben Aissa. Others named in the lawsuit are a Swiss lawyer and banker and their respective firms.

None of the claims in the April 2 filing by the Montreal-based company has been proven in court.

The lawsuit is in addition to SNC’s efforts to recover $22.5 million allegedly paid to Ben Aissa and others related to a Montreal hospital constructi­on contract.

Mounties alleged in February that between 2001 and 2011 SNC-Lavalin paid nearly $47.7 million to public officials in Libya to influence government decisions. It also charged the company, its constructi­on division and its SNC-Lavalin Internatio­nal subsidiary with defrauding various Libyan organizati­ons of about $129.8 million. The company has said it will plead not guilty.

SNC alleges Ben Aissa never disclosed to senior management other than Bebawi that he was the owner of the entities he had selected to receive a percentage of the contract awards. The company also said Ben Aissa launched false integrity check certificat­ions of one of the entities.

SNC-Lavalin said it only became aware of this when Swiss authoritie­s and the RCMP executed two search warrants at the company’s Montreal head office in April 2012.

It says nearly $67.8 million of the funds received by the entities were distribute­d to Ben Aissa, and $13.7 million to Bebawi.

Ben Aissa was charged with fraudrelat­ed offences in Canada after he was extradited from Switzerlan­d last October. Swiss authoritie­s had sentenced him to the 29 months he’d served in jail on charges relating to SNC-Lavalin’s business in Libya. They also ordered him to repay millions of dollars to the company.

Ben Aissa acknowledg­ed in Swiss court that he bribed Saadi Gadhafi, son of Libya’s late dictator, Moammar Gadhafi, so SNC could win contracts. Ben Aissa also admitted to pocketing commission­s. Bebawi was charged by the RCMP last year. In February 2014, the Mounties charged Bebawi with fraud over $5,000; two counts of laundering proceeds of crime; four counts of possession of property obtained by crime and with bribing a foreign public official. In September 2014, the RCMP charged him with obstructin­g justice.

 ?? RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? SNC-Lavalin claims money tied to projects was allegedly funnelled to benefit Riadh Ben Aissa and Sami Bebawi.
RYAN REMIORZ/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO SNC-Lavalin claims money tied to projects was allegedly funnelled to benefit Riadh Ben Aissa and Sami Bebawi.

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