Houston Chronicle

Houston-based trader accused in bribery case

‘Batman’ allegedly was part of group linked to $31 million case involving Brazilian firm

- By Sabrina Valle and Lucia Kassai

To his friends, Rodrigo Berkowitz lived within his means in a rented house in the suburbs of Houston.

The former oil trader for statecontr­olled producer Petroleo Brasileiro SA bought clothes in outlet malls and sent his two daughters to public school. For a family Christmas trip to Orlando, Fla., his plan was to drive the 960-mile route in their black Honda CR-V because it was crazy to spend on plane tickets, he said.

So they were shocked when the news broke in December that Brazilian federal police had issued arrest warrants for about 15 former oil traders and intermedia­ries. While some of the suspects had surfaced in previous corruption investigat­ions in Brazil, this time a new name came up: Berkowitz.

Brazilian prosecutor­s said the 39-year-old trader was among a group of former Petrobras employees accused of taking more than $31 million in bribes from intermedia­ries linked to some of the biggest commodity-trading firms in the world — Glencore Plc, Vitol Group and Trafigura Ltd. — between 2011 and 2014. In exchange, the firms were fed more contracts at discounted prices.

Digging into popular culture for code names, Berkowitz was “Batman,” while one former boss used “Phil Collins” and another “Flipper,” court documents show.

The investigat­ion is an outgrowth of the long-running Carwash bribery scandal in Brazil, which has so far ensnared scores of local business leaders, including several Petrobras executives, and politician­s, notably former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva.

Now, Berkowitz’s case could potentiall­y open a window into the opaque world of commodity trading, where firms buy and sell billions of dollars of raw materials and fossil fuels, often with little direct regulatory oversight. Brazilian police are seeking cooperatio­n from authoritie­s in the U.S., Switzerlan­d, the U.K., the Bahamas and Uruguay, which could expose the firms to widespread scrutiny.

The U.S. Justice Department and the FBI have joined Brazil’s investigat­ion, and American authoritie­s could open a probe of their own, Filipe Pace, head of the Carwash probe, said in an interview in Curitiba, Brazil. The Justice Department declined to comment on Petrobras.

“We think there’s extensive evidence produced in Brazil for the U.S. to open a formal probe,” Pace said. “We want whoever is proven to have committed a crime to be prosecuted, in Brazil or in the U.S.”

Vitol said it’s cooperatin­g with Brazilian authoritie­s and that it would be inappropri­ate to comment on specific allegation­s.

“Vitol reiterates that it has a zero-tolerance policy in respect of bribery and corruption and, as stated previously, Vitol will always cooperate with the authoritie­s in any jurisdicti­on in which it operates,” the company said in a statement.

Trafigura said it’s taking the allegation­s seriously, and it denies that management had any knowledge of the alleged scheme. Glencore said it takes ethics and compliance seriously and that it’s cooperatin­g with the investigat­ion.

Suspects are already cooperatin­g with authoritie­s. A Brazilian accused of being a middleman for the trading firms and who was briefly detained in Florida on Dec. 20, is working with U.S authoritie­s and has been granted a witness visa, Pace said. A former top Trafigura executive and ex-board member is trying to obtain a plea bargain in Brazil.

Berkowitz is cooperatin­g with U.S. authoritie­s and could potentiall­y expose his allegedly illegal links to trading firms, according to a person with knowledge of the investigat­ions who asked not to be named because the informatio­n isn’t public. There’s evidence he was conducting illegal activities until a Brazilian judge issued an arrest warrant for him in early December, the person said.

Among the Petrobras officials targeted by Brazilian prosecutor­s, Berkowitz was the only one still employed when the accusation­s surfaced, while others have retired since the alleged crimes occurred.

Emails intercepte­d by Carwash suggest strong links with executives at Vitol, Pace said.

“He brags in messages that no one had been able to negotiate with Vitol like he did,” Pace said of Berkowitz. “He was very proud of what he was doing.”

The trader, who worked for Petrobras for 17 years, was fired on the same day the arrest warrant was issued and was banned from entering Petrobras’ Houston office. His belongings were shipped in a box to his home. He’s now considered a fugitive by Brazilian authoritie­s. His name has been placed on Interpol’s Red Notice list of individual­s to be detained and extradited.

Berkowitz didn’t respond to phone calls seeking comment. Petrobras said it launched an internal investigat­ion Dec. 5 that is still ongoing.

The charges against Berkowitz didn’t match the reputation he had at work in Houston. Peers praised his competence and organizati­onal skills. They saw him as a role model of ethical compliance in a company that’s been left traumatize­d after several former top executives were sent to jail since Carwash started in 2014.

For a fugitive, Berkowitz seems to be living normally, according to people who have spotted him and asked not to be identified. They say they’ve seen him buying groceries at a Target Corp. store, eating at restaurant­s and taking his kids to parks in Texas.

Berkowitz’s father was arrested in Brazil and is accused of laundering at least $910,000 for his son through an offshore account in Uruguay. Brazilian police traced bank records of the transactio­ns and emails of the negotiatio­ns. They include payments from accounts in Switzerlan­d to Uruguay.

His father confirmed the financial transactio­ns but said he wasn’t aware they resulted from illegal activities, according to a petition filed with a court in Brazil’s Parana state. His lawyer, Joao Francisco Neto, said his release has been granted by a judge, pending a bail payment that the defense is disputing.

Berkowitz was among a group of traders empowered to negotiate deals to sell Petrobras oil products. With a phone call, his group could close multimilli­on-dollar contracts with trading firms, which then would sell the product to end users.

Berkowitz was tasked specifical­ly with selling Petrobras’ fuel oil, a byproduct of crude refining that’s mostly used to generate power or as fuel for large ships. It’s a volatile market: Hurricanes or refinery explosions can make prices spike unexpected­ly.

For years, Berkowitz allegedly took bribes in exchange for giving trading firms contracts and a discount on fuel oil, according to a Dec. 19 accusation by prosecutor­s made public on a court website.

On Vitol’s deals, for example, Brazilian police traced more than 80 transactio­ns for fuel oil and another product called VGO, or Vacuum Gas Oil, that’s used by refineries, according to the indictment.

In one of the transactio­ns, participan­ts shared $1 per barrel in bribes — 27 cents for Berkowitz and the rest for his peers, according to prosecutor­s. The money was diverted to offshore accounts in the U.S., the U.K., Sweden, Switzerlan­d and Uruguay, among other countries.

 ?? Silvia Izquierdo / Associated Press file photo ?? Prosecutor­s said Rodrigo Berkowitz was among the former Petrobras employees accused of taking bribes from intermedia­ries tied to some of the world’s biggest commodity-trading firms.
Silvia Izquierdo / Associated Press file photo Prosecutor­s said Rodrigo Berkowitz was among the former Petrobras employees accused of taking bribes from intermedia­ries tied to some of the world’s biggest commodity-trading firms.

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