Sunday Times

Beware the profession­ally corrupt

- Do you face an ethical dilemma? Do you suspect corruption? If you need help to resolve such issues, write to the Corruption Watch experts at letters@businessti­mes.co.za. Mark your letter ‘Dear Corruption Watch’

DEAR Corruption Watch, Many corrupt transactio­ns either require profession­als to execute them or leave them in a position to be aware of them. Lawyers, engineers, auditors and doctors agree to adhere to profession­al codes of ethics. Theses codes should mean that those profession­als party to corrupt activities should be unable to continue to practice, don’t they? — Puzzled

Dear Puzzled, You are right — most profession­als have bodies that lay down rules and regulate their conduct. So, for example, attorneys have the Law Society and advocates belong to the bar with its rules. Ethical rules are enforced by means of various sanctions, including suspension and, if warranted, disbarment. A recent case against several Pretoria advocates serves as a good example of corruption touching the public and private sector.

These advocates were involved in cases relating to the Road Accident Fund, which was set up by the government to pay the victims of car accidents.

We support the fund each time we put petrol in our cars (a certain amount of money is deducted per litre and paid over to it).

These r advocates were writing huge fees (they were referred to as the “million-amonth” club) by making double or triple bookings for trials on the same day. It is not possible to run more than one trial a day and the bar rules specifical­ly prohibit this. They charged day fees for all the matters set down on one day because they simply settled all these matters so that they would never go to trial.

The Road Accident Fund was paying enormous fees to them and somebody must have been suspicious. And the attorneys would have had to be in on it, because at some point they would have picked up on the double bookings and the exorbitant fees.

A special tribunal consisting of retired judges heard the matter. The advocates were found guilty. The recommende­d sanctions of disbarment — for some — and fines for all were enforced.

Doctors, engineers, accountant­s . . . all have opportunit­ies to participat­e in corrupt activities: doctors using public facilities for private practice, engineers manipulati­ng tenders in return for kickbacks, accountant­s signing off on fraudulent profits and hiding real losses.

The US gave us an exquisite example of the lure of lucre that corrupted one of the largest accounting firms in the world. Recall Enron, the US energy giant that crashed because of massive fraudulent transactio­ns, leaving in its wake tattered reputation­s, a manager suicide and one wife who, mourning the evaporated bonus, remarked how tragic the whole affair was. Hubris, arrogance and some plain old low-down dealing — Hollywood, too, got some yummy subject matter.

Anyway, with Enron lying prone like a star-spangled Ozymandias and investigat­ors picking over its carcass, it soon became apparent that Arthur Andersen, its accountant­s, were complicit in hiding losses and signing off on fraudulent profits, leading to its effective dissolutio­n. In this example you had the active participat­ion of not only profession­als, but an esteemed and trusted firm of accountant­s with a global reach who meticulous­ly — and over a long period — aided corrupt practices.

Private sector corruption remains corruption.

As the two examples show, profession­als can participat­e and do participat­e and, in fact, execute corrupt practices. When caught, they face not only the opprobrium of their profession­al body, but prosecutio­n by the state — although this, unfortunat­ely, happens far too infrequent­ly.

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