Boston Herald

Oil trader settles bribery claims

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GENEVA >> Geneva-based commoditie­s trading firm Gunvor said that it has reached a $661 million settlement with U.S. and Swiss prosecutor­s after conviction­s for bribery of foreign officials in connection with the petroleum industry in Ecuador.

The Swiss attorney general’s office says the company didn’t take “reasonable and necessary organizati­onal measures” to prevent bribery by its employees in the South American country over four years starting in February 2013.

A statement from U.S. Federal Court in Brooklyn said Judge Vitaliano sentenced Gunvor to pay a criminal penalty of over $374 million and forfeit more than $287 million in “ill-gotten gains.”

“Gunvor has accepted responsibi­lity for the actions of certain of its former agents and employees — all of whom Gunvor stopped working with years ago and before it learned of the U.S. investigat­ion — and pled guilty in federal court in New York” on Friday, the company said in a statement.

The Swiss prosecutor­s said the case involved payouts that led the state petroleum company Petroecuad­or to award two oil-related contracts to Gunvor. U.S. authoritie­s said the Geneva commoditie­s trader earned more than $384 million in profits “from the business it corruptly obtained” related to the Ecuadorian oil company.

U.S. authoritie­s said they had previously won conviction­s in New York of four people who pleaded guilty to money laundering-related charges, including former Gunvor consultant­s Antonio Pere Ycaza and Enrique Pere Ycaza; former Gunvor employee and agent Raymond Kohut; and Nilsen Arias Sandoval, a former senior Petroecuad­or official.

“Gunvor’s years long bribery scheme involving high-level Ecuadoran officials was both detrimenta­l to the business environmen­t and eroded the public’s trust and confidence in their government,” said FBI Special Agent-in-Charge Jeffrey Veltri in a statement.

He credited “significan­t cooperatio­n” from authoritie­s in the Cayman Islands, Colombia, Curacao, Ecuador, Panama, Portugal, Singapore, and Switzerlan­d.

 ?? JAMEY KEATEN, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Geneva-based commoditie­s trading firm Gunvor said that it has reached a $661 million settlement with U.S. and Swiss prosecutor­s after conviction­s for bribery of foreign officials in connection with the petroleum industry in Ecuador.
JAMEY KEATEN, FILE — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Geneva-based commoditie­s trading firm Gunvor said that it has reached a $661 million settlement with U.S. and Swiss prosecutor­s after conviction­s for bribery of foreign officials in connection with the petroleum industry in Ecuador.

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