Miami Herald

Amid corruption spree, Odebrecht set up shop in Luxembourg

Amid its spree of corruption during the past decade, it’s perhaps no surprise that Brazilian-based Odebrecht found its way to Luxembourg, which offered both secrecy and tax breaks.

- BY KEVIN G. HALL khall@mcclatchyd­c.com

As bribery investigat­ions were galloping in the United States and globally, Brazilian engineerin­g giant Odebrecht in 2015 quietly registered new companies in the tiny tax haven of Luxembourg, known until recently as a safe harbor for those seeking or needing secrecy.

Less than a year later, the Department of Justice announced that Odebrecht had agreed to a breathtaki­ng plea deal. Executives acknowledg­ed paying a staggering $788 million in bribes to win business, through a special Structured Operations division, whose executives at one point moved to Miami to avoid the figurative heat.

Odebrecht lawyers agreed to pay $2.6 billion, a record settlement under the United States’ Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

Nowhere in the 74-page plea deal was there any reference to Luxembourg. The focus was on Switzerlan­d, Luxembourg’s larger rival in the business of secrecy and banking.

But a new global collaborat­ive reporting project called OpenLux, which reveals a nonpublic registry of true owners of companies in Luxembourg, is now filling in blanks in the

still-unfolding story of how Odebrecht reaped millions in profits thanks to corruption across Latin America and Africa.

It’s a tale of how an admittedly crooked company hid in plain sight, moving to Luxembourg, on paper, some its operations involved with some of the most egregious illegality. Some of the names of the individual­s on the Luxembourg companies are also associated with the bribery, although not all were criminally charged. It all muddied the trail for prosecutor­s in pursuit while allowing Odebrecht to maximize its illegally-won business through aggressive, albeit legal, tax avoidance.

Odebrecht competed for business against U.S. oil and engineerin­g companies, which are prohibited from paying bribes by the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The story remains an important one because of how bribery empowered and sustained corrupt government­s, undermined U.S. foreign policy interests, enriched those who rule over societies of great inequity and weakened a growing global move toward transparen­cy.

Luxembourg knew at the time that Odebrecht was under internatio­nal investigat­ion. Its public prosecutor’s office confirmed in a statement to McClatchy and the Miami Herald that it cooperated with Brazilian investigat­ors’ inquiries — called rogatory letters — about Odebrecht’s new European businesses.

“These letters rogatory — which date from 2014, 2015 and 2017 — were executed and returned with the necessary informatio­n to the Brazilian authoritie­s,” said the statement.

U.S. prosecutor­s, focused on the behavior of some Odebrecht executives who resided temporaril­y in South Florida, were not focused on Luxembourg shell companies and bank accounts over the period from 2015 to 2017. They were interested in Odebrecht operations in Ecuador and Venezuela and how those tied to South Florida.

“We were looking at Odrebrecht’s country managers [in the United States] and their use of the U.S. banking system,” said a federal law enforcemen­t official familiar with the investigat­ion of bribes paid out of Miami to foreign contractor­s. The official spoke on condition of anonymity because of ongoing related prosecutio­ns.

U.S. court-ordered monitoring of Odebrecht’s finances ended last November. The following month Odebrecht announced it had rebranded itself as Novonor. It even gave itself a new motto, “Inspired by the future.”

Odebrecht’s U.S. subsidiary, the holder of airport constructi­on contracts in Miami, wasn’t implicated in the bribery.

DOGGED BY PAST

At least 13 companies with the Odebrecht name appear as incorporat­ed firms in Luxembourg’s corporate registry, many of them created in 2015 and 2016, a period when the company was engulfed in the infamous Lava Jato, or Car Wash, corruption probe at home. It brought down big-name politician­s and contribute­d to the impeachmen­t of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff months before the DOJ settlement.

There are at least 14 other Odebrecht entities that appear in the fine print of annual balance sheets reported by the incorporat­ed Odebrecht companies, underscori­ng the challenge to auditors and prosecutor­s trying to follow the money.

Many of these companies were created at a time when prosecutor­s in the Eastern District of

New York were aggressive­ly investigat­ing Odebrecht, which also owns Braskem, the largest petrochemi­cal company in Latin America.

Odebrecht might have been following the likes of Amazon and other multinatio­nals that locate some of their businesses in Luxembourg for its low corporate tax rate, and because for larger firms the country negotiates individual­ized, private tax rulings. These bind the tax authority to an agreed-upon interpreta­tion of complex taxes.

If Odebrecht’s motives for moving operations to Luxembourg were strictly financial, the benefits would flow to its legitimate and illicit activities alike. It could use its tax savings to pay shareholde­rs, reinvest in operations — or grease palms.

“Luxembourg has been known as an attractive jurisdicti­on for Brazilian multinatio­nal companies to use as an internatio­nal hub, offering a very competitiv­e tax environmen­t for global transactio­ns and business-friendly regulation­s, right in the heart of Europe,” said Flavio Rubinstein, a tax lawyer and professor at São Paulo’s Fundação Getulio Vargas university.

Rubinstein said Luxembourg offered tax savings to Odebrecht by way of a tax treaty with Brazil. Since the company’s bankruptcy in June 2019, details have emerged about its aggressive tax strategy.

EUROPEAN TENTACLES

One such detail was that its Luxembourg-based companies had subsidiari­es and affiliates with addresses in Austria. In fact, Odebrecht had 20 companies in Austria that their managing director, Paul Doralt, told Vienna television broadcaste­r

ORF were set up to take advantage of a taxation treaty with Brazil.

“If the companies had become profitable they would have been able to earn tax-free profits,” Doralt said.

Importantl­y, he said there were no employees in Austria, just companies on paper for operations in Angola, Peru and Venezuela.

Those three countries, as it happened, were singled out in detail in the U.S. plea deal in 2016.

Lawyers who incorporat­ed some of Odebrecht’s Luxembourg companies declined to discuss the matter. Asked why the tax domiciles were changed during a period when Odebrecht was under investigat­ion, Brazil-based representa­tives of the new company, Novonor, did not respond over a period stretching nearly three weeks. The Miami office for what had been Odebrecht USA also did not respond.

In September 2015, lawyers in Luxembourg registered Odebrecht Mining Services Investment­s Sarl, involved in its African mining operations, and listed a Brazilian company, OPI S.A., as an associated company.

OPI’s directors were Odebrecht employees, including one who soon afterward was in the center of a political corruption probe in Guatemala —Marcos de Cerqueira Lima Machado. More on him later.

Odebrecht Mining is significan­t because it was a company involved in Angola, where as in Brazil the language is Portuguese. Odebrecht has long worked in tandem there with Brazil’s state oil company, Petrobras, in oil exploratio­n and production.

A month after Odebrecht Mining registered in Luxembourg, it replaced its associate member with a company called Odebrecht Africa Fund Sarl. That sounds like a charity but it actually was a limited liability company involved in a range of Angolan ventures.

If you search in the Luxembourg corporate registry by name for Odebrecht Africa, you won’t find it. It’s buried in other documents. It came to light by searching a nonpublic ownership registry.

The Miami Herald and its parent, McClatchy partnered with 17 media outlets, including Le Monde in France and the Organized Crime and Corruption Reporting Project, to analyze Luxembourg’s corporate registry, which contains more than 140,000 active companies.

The collaborat­ive OpenLux project allowed reporters to effectivel­y recreate the list of beneficial, or true, owners of companies registered in Luxembourg. That led reporters to companies owned by 75 Americans on the Forbes list of wealthiest people, NBA legend Magic Johnson and even the brother of a powerful general who controls levers of the Cuban economy. A spokesman for the fund connected to Magic Johnson said the superstar had no involvemen­t in the investment decision.

TIES TO AFRICAN STRONGMAN

The Luxembourg documents name several Odebrecht executives tied to scandals across Africa and the Americas, as directors or administra­tors of new companies in the taxfriendl­y Western European country.

Like Switzerlan­d, Luxembourg has been prized for its relative secrecy and until recently its fewquestio­ns-asked approach to company ownership. In 2019, under pressure from its European Union partners, Luxembourg created a registry of owners that shed light on the Angolatied businesses of Odebrecht.

Angola ranks 142nd out of 180 countries in Transparen­cy Internatio­nal’s Corruption Perception Index, consistent­ly anchored in the bottom 25% year after year.

In the U.S. plea agreement, prosecutor­s said that between 2006 and 2013, Odebrecht made or caused to be made more than $50 million “in corrupt payments to government officials in Angola in order to secure public works contracts. Odebrecht realized benefits of approximat­ely $261.7 million as a result of these corrupt payments.”

Odebrecht’s Luxembourg companies involved in Africa listed an address in the Talatona section of the Angolan capital of Luanda. That happens to be where Odebrecht won a government contract from President Jose Eduardo dos Santos to build luxury condos. Dos Santos ruled for 38 years, before falling in 2017. His daughter Isabel gained internatio­nal notoriety as the wealthiest woman in Africa thanks to an investigat­ion into kleptocrac­y called Luanda Leaks.

Before its near-death experience, Odebrecht was the largest privatesec­tor employer in Angola. Beyond constructi­on and mining in the oil-rich nation, it has been building a hydroelect­ric dam and power facility on the Kwanza River.

A November 2014 notice in Angola’s federal register featured a presidenti­al decree awarding Odebrecht and a partner a $74 million project to build supermarke­ts, through a company called Odebrecht Africa Retail Services.

President Dos Santos for decades showed little appetite for fighting corruption, and Odebrecht flourished there for decades, even involved in a diamond mining project with Russia’s state diamond company, Alrosa, and Lev Leviev, the Russian-Israeli billionair­e charged with internatio­nal diamond smuggling in 2018.

HOW DOTS CONNECT

A prior global reporting partnershi­p, led by the Internatio­nal Consortium of Internatio­nal Journalist­s, teased at what Odebrecht might have been up to in Angola.

In a project called The Bribery Division, reporters deciphered logs from a parallel accounting system used by Odebrecht’s special division devoted to paying for bribes, and documented how Miami played an important role.

The logs showed movement of funds between shell companies, using code names for the executives in charge of accounting for the bribes and other irregular, offbalance sheet payments. They show folders belonging to Tushio, a codename for one of the division leaders, Luiz Soares, and transfers to Angola referencin­g contracts, operations and annual payments. Soares operated out of Miami for a time.

Some of the logs list OEC, which appears to be Odebrecht Engenharia e Construção in Brazil, a constructi­on division that, on paper, became part of Odebrecht Services Sarl in Luxembourg in October 2016.

An email in the leak of Odebrecht bribery-division documents also showed two executives communicat­ing under their code names Noshua and Waterloo, arranging the transfer of money to Ecuador and Angola through a shell company called Sigma. It directs a deposit of more than $1.7 million to Angola and notes without explanatio­n Luanda’s Talatona section. (Noshua was never identified, though Waterloo was one of the division leaders, Fernando Migliaccio, who also transferre­d to Miami.)

The bribery division made payments through Panama, Switzerlan­d and the Antigua branch of Austria’s Meinl Bank. Odebrecht took a majority stake in the Caribbean branch bank in 2010.

AFRICA TO THE ANDES

In April 2019, about two months before publicatio­n of the Bribery Division stories, former Peruvian President Alan García committed suicide as police came to arrest him in connection with what then was alleged Odebrecht bribery.

Peru figured in Odebrecht’s Luxembourg enterprise­s, too. The corporate registry shows an original firm called Odebrecht Energy Luxembourg Sarl, registered in 2013. It became Odebrecht Latin Investment­s Sarl in 2014, and an endof-year report in 2015 describes it as a company for holding investment­s in Peru and other Latin countries.

On the original registrati­on document is an administra­tor named Antonio Marco Campos Rabello. He headed the similarly named Odebrecht Energia in Brazil, and appears in a court document and deposition given by then-Odebrecht CEO Marcelo Odebrecht.

Campos was on an email with division chiefs as they appear to be given talking points from the CEO to ensure they all give the same response to what at the time was a widening scandal.

There is no sign that Campos has faced criminal charges. Also on that email list was Luiz Antonio Mameri, who was later identified as one of the unnamed Odebrecht employees involved in Peruvian bribery and cited in the DOJ indictment.

Mameri was in charge of Latin America and Angola operations and would have been involved in the operations of companies that, on paper, moved to Luxembourg. He was also involved in Odebrecht’s efforts to build a container terminal in the Cuban port city of Mariel.

The 2015 annual report in Luxembourg also identified an entity, Odebrecht Energia del Peru S.A. — one that also appears in Luxembourg’s registry — as being involved with a hydroelect­ric plant in Peru’s Amazonian region. It also detailed investment­s in other projects in the Andean nation, where four presidents were alleged to have received bribes from Odebrecht.

In fact, Mameri appeared in emails from 2011 made public in 2018 during Peruvian prosecutio­ns that showed Odebrecht’s country manager in Peru asking for and receiving from Mamari money for the presidenti­al campaign of Keiko Fujimori, the daughter of Peru’s former president Alberto Fujimori.

A report in November 2018 by a German non-government­al organizati­on tracked the evolution of Odebrecht’s Panama-based shell companies to their becoming Luxembourg holding entities under the Latinvest name over a period of 2011 to 2017. In some cases the European company wiring money for Odebrecht projects in Colombia and Peru changed names four times in a year.

“The change of names, ownership and addresses seems to make it hard to trace the money flows and their purpose,” the German report said, adding that “the financial route via Panama and Luxembourg provides an indication that at least tax avoidance may have been involved” along with legitimate use of tax treaties.

LUXEMBOURG TO CENTRAL AMERICA

Even tiny Guatemala, one of the poorest nations in the hemisphere, was on Odebrecht’s to-do list.

Investigat­ions in Guatemala found that Odebrecht provided nearly $40 million in bribes and overpaymen­ts, through a government minister to win a highway constructi­on contract, and in donations to presidenti­al campaigns.

An email obtained by Brazilian prosecutor­s, sent in 2008 by Marcelo Odebrecht, advised board members to lean on thenBrazil­ian President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva to speak supportive­ly of Odebrecht when meeting with the Guatemalan president-elect. The company, he noted crypticall­y, had made illicit campaign contributi­ons.

It showed, said prosecutor­s, how the engineerin­g giant relied on graft in both countries to achieve its aims.

And testimony in late 2017 confirming this illicit activity in Guatemala came by way of an insider witness from Odebrecht who accepted a plea deal back in Brazil. He was an executive in the contracts area, Marcos da Cerqueira Lima Machado.

Coincident­ally, he’s also listed on that Luxembourg company with Africa ties, OPI S.A. It’s a small world, after all.

Hong Kong police charged dozens of opposition activists including Joshua Wong with violating the city’s national security law, taking formal action against them less than a week before China’s highest-profile annual political meeting.

Of the 55 opposition figures initially arrested in January, 47 were charged with conspiracy to commit subversion on Sunday.

They had previously been facing allegation­s of subversion. It is the largest mass charge under the new law since it went into effect last year.

The former lawmakers and activists were being detained pending a court appearance Monday, the police said in a statement.

Some had been asked to report to the police’s national security branch on Sunday, more than a month earlier than scheduled.

They were arrested in January on suspicion of subversion for their roles in helping organize a democratic primary contest over the summer that drew more than 600,000 voters.

Wong — who testified before the U.S. Congress last year and was the subject of a Netflix documentar­y “Joshua: Teenager vs. Superpower” — was already behind bars.

He is serving a sentence of over a year handed down in December for a separate charge related to a protest in 2019; this is the first time he’s been charged under the national security law.

Beijing is tightening control over the Asian financial center after a historic wave of democracy protests gripped Hong Kong for months in 2019.

The national security law carries sentences as long as life in prison depending on the severity of the offense.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States