The Borneo Post

Brazil judge suspends aspects of J&F leniency, asset sales in limbo

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BRASILIA: A Brazilian judge suspended criminal aspects of the leniency agreement of J& F Investimen­tos SA, a holding company run by the scandalrid­den Batista family, adding to uncertaint­y about billions of dollars of asset sales.

Federal Judge Val l isney de Souza Ol iveira held up the criminal immunity of additional J& F executives until the Supreme Court makes a final ruling on Joesley Batista’s plea bargain in a corruption probe, whose benefits were revoked due to evidence he had hidden some crimes from prosecutor­s.

Police flew Batista to Brasilia on Monday fol lowing his surrender to authoritie­s in Sao Paulo over the weekend after he lost immunity from prosecutio­n. Police also raided J& F’s headquar ters and Batista’s home on orders from Supreme Court Justice Edson Fachin.

Uncertaint­y about J& F’s leniency agreement could threaten an estimated 14 billion reais ( US$ 4.5 billion) of recent asset sales and jeopardize the future of a company that diversifie­d from meatpackin­g into fashion, energy, wood pulp and banking over the past five years.

J& F lawyers said Joesley Batista “did not lie or omit informatio­n” in his plea deals. A lawyer for Batista did not take calls seeking comment.

JBS SA, the world’s largest meatpacker and the crown jewel of the Batistas’ empire, also signed terms last week to participat­e in the J& F leniency agreement.

On Monday, JBS agreed to sell its British poultry unit Moy Park to US subsidiary Pilgrim’s Pride Corp for US$1 billion.

Civil aspects of the J& F’s leniency agreement, which was signed in June and ratified by Judge Oliveira on Friday, remain in effect, according to a statement late on Monday from federal prosecutor­s.

J& F reached a deal with prosecutor­s earlier this year agreeing to pay a record fine of 10.3 billion reais for its role in a corruption scandal involving the bribery of hundreds of politician­s.

That settlement was based on a plea bargain signed by Joesley Batista and collaborat­ors in May to deliver evidence including a recording of his conversati­on with President Michel Temer, which led to a corruption charge against the leader.

But additional evidence later handed to prosecutor­s included another tape that appeared to show that Batista had been helped by federal prosecutor Marcelo Miller in crafting the plea deal and concealing certain crimes, according to prosecutor­s. — Reuters

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