The Borneo Post

US, Brazil fine Petrobras US$853 mln in bribery

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WASHINGTON: US and Brazilian authoritie­s have fined Brazil’s state oil giant Petrobras more than US$ 853 million for covering up a massive bribery scheme involving Brazilian politician­s and political parties, the US Justice Department announced.

Petrobras said the issues were uncovered as part of the ‘Operation Car Wash’ investigat­ion – the scandal that snared Brazil’s jailed former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva as well as many of the country’s political and business elites.

Petrobras executives at “the highest levels,” including board members, orchestrat­ed hundreds of millions in bribes “and then cooked the books to conceal the bribe payments from investors and regulators,” US Assistant Attorney General Brian Benczkowsk­i said in a statement.

US stock market regulators also charged the company with misleading investors as they concealed “a massive bribery and bid-rigging scheme.”

The company inflated the cost of projects and then contractor­s “paid billions in kickbacks to the Petrobras executives, who shared the illegal payments with Brazilian politician­s who helped them obtain their high-level positions at Petrobras,” the Securities and Exchange Commission said in a statement.

Petrobras erroneousl­y recorded these payments “resulting in an estimated US$ 2.5 billion overstatem­ent of assets,” the SEC said.

Petrobras agreed to pay US$933.5 million to the SEC to return illgotten gains, but this sum will be reduced by the amount of any payments made in a class action lawsuit by investors filed in New York.

The actions the company admitted to occurred while Petrobras was traded on the New York Stock Exchange, giving US authoritie­s jurisdicti­on, the Justice Department said.

Petrobras admit ted some executives funneled payments to politician­s and political parties, and that the company failed to keep accurate books and records about property and equipment, as required by law.

The company said ‘Operation Car Wash’ was “a corrupt scheme that harmed and caused severe financial loss to Petrobras.”

The resolution with US and Brazilian authoritie­s “is in Petrobras’s best interest and that of its shareholde­rs. It puts an end to the uncertaint­ies, risks, burdens and costs of potential prosecutio­n and protracted litigation in the United States,” the company said in a statement.

Brazilian authoritie­s will receive 80 per cent of the fine, and the remainder will be collected by the Justice Department and the SEC.

Prosecutor­s say a Petrobras executive directed payments to stop a Brazilian parliament­ary inquiry into company contracts.

The executive allegedly funnelled bribes from company contractor­s into the campaign of an unnamed Brazilian politician who had power over where Petrobras could build refineries.

Executives then falsely certified Petrobras financial statements to the US Securities and Exchange Commission even while they were personally involved in the bribery.

“According to Petrobras’s admissions ... members of the Petrobras executive board were involved in facilitati­ng and directing millions of dollars in corrupt payments to politician­s and political parties in Brazil, and members of Petrobras’s board of directors were also involved in facilitati­ng bribes that a major Petrobras contractor was paying to Brazilian politician­s,” the Justice Department statement said.

As part of the agreement announced Thursday, Petrobras agreed to continue cooperatin­g with in any continuing investigat­ions into the matter, including actions taken by individual­s, and to make changes to its internal compliance program.

The settlement involved a “nonprosecu­tion agreement,” meaning no charges will be brought against the company. Prosecutor­s may separately take action against individual­s.

More than 40 countries including the United States have criminaliz­ed paying bribes abroad to win business, which authoritie­s say defrauds investors while promoting corruption and political instabilit­y.

The company ’ s sha r e s rose on Thursday morning in Sao Paolo and New York. — AFP

 ??  ?? The main entrance of the headquarte­rs of Brazil’s state-controlled oil company Petrobras in Rio de Janeiro. US and Brazilian authoritie­s have fined Brazil’s oil giant Petrobras more than US$853 million for paying bribes to Brazilian politician­s and political parties, the US Justice Department announced on September 27. — AFP photo
The main entrance of the headquarte­rs of Brazil’s state-controlled oil company Petrobras in Rio de Janeiro. US and Brazilian authoritie­s have fined Brazil’s oil giant Petrobras more than US$853 million for paying bribes to Brazilian politician­s and political parties, the US Justice Department announced on September 27. — AFP photo
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