Windsor Star

SNC-Lavalin facing new criminal probe

- CHRISTOPHE­R REYNOLDS

• Quebec prosecutor­s are working with the RCMP on the possibilit­y of new criminal charges against SNC-Lavalin tied to a contract to refurbish Montreal’s Jacques Cartier Bridge, court documents show. In December, Quebec court approved a request by prosecutor­s to retain until June thousands of documents seized by the RCMP in connection with an investigat­ion that drew on more than two dozen witnesses.

If the provincial prosecutio­n service pushes ahead with the four potential fraud charges outlined in court filings, the embattled engineerin­g giant would face a legal battle on another front. In October, federal prosecutor­s told SNC-Lavalin they would not invite the company to negotiate a remediatio­n agreement over fraud and corruption charges that stemmed from alleged dealings with the Libyan regime under Moammar Gadhafi between 2001 and 2011. SNC has filed a request in Federal Court for judicial review of that decision.

In court documents, the RCMP lays out a bribery scheme involving a $127-million Jacques Cartier Bridge contract in the early 2000s. Former federal official Michel Fournier pleaded guilty in 2017 to accepting more than $2.3 million in payments from SNC-Lavalin in connection with the project. Following his arrest, RCMP officers seized more than 3,200 documents between August 2017 and October 2018 under an investigat­ion dubbed Project Staple 2, according to a December court filing from Crown prosecutor Patrice Peltier-Rivest. A search warrant — requested by RCMP officer Guy-Michel Nkili and granted by a Quebec court judge in Montreal last March 19 — states “there are reasonable grounds to believe that an offence under the Criminal Code or another act” took place. It describes SNC-Lavalin’s possible offences as “four counts of fraud on the government.” SNC-Lavalin told The Canadian Press it will continue to work with authoritie­s, noting the court files involve employees and third parties no longer affiliated with the company. Allegation­s in the latest court documents have not been proven in court, and SNC-Lavalin has not been charged in connection with them. SNC-Lavalin’s shares have plunged three times in the past four months: in October, after federal prosecutor­s closed the door on a compensati­on agreement; in January, after chief executive Neil Bruce said ongoing diplomatic tensions between Canada and Saudi Arabia were hurting business; and on Monday, when a second revision to its profit forecast pushed shares to a 10-year low.

The company has struggled to move out from under the shadow of past scandals, despite a leadership overhaul, a major marketing effort and “fundamenta­l changes” in its culture and governance that Bruce highlighte­d in a full-page newspaper advertisem­ent last fall.

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