The United States Justice Department and the Federal Bureau of
Investigation said on Tuesday the German-based international engineering
company, Bilfinger SE, had agreed to pay a $32m penalty for charges
relating to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act violation.
Bilfinger’s Nigerian construction subsidiary, Julius `Berger Plc, was
charged with bribing government officials to obtain and retain
contracts related to work for the Eastern Gas Gathering System, a
project valued at $387m.
The agreement follows a three-count criminal charge filed in the US
District Court for the Southern District of Texas, according to a report
by SaharaReporters.
According to the complaint, from late 2003 through 2005, Julius
Berger had conspired with Willbros Group Inc., and others to make
payments totalling $6m to unnamed Nigerian government officials to
obtain EGGS contracts. Continue...
Julius Berger and Willbros formed a joint venture and inflated its
bid by three per cent to cover the cost of the bribe. Part of the
conspiracy involved Julius Berger’s employees bribing Nigerian officials
with cash sent from Germany.
The Justice Department and Bilfinger agreed to resolve the charges by
entering a deferred prosecution agreement for a term of three years.
Bilfinger also agreed to implement internal controls, continue
cooperating with the Justice Department, and retain a corporate
compliance monitor for 18 months.
Prosecutors also resolved charges with Bilfinger’s collaborator on
the bribe, Willbros, and three former Willbros executives or consultants
who pleaded guilty, and a fourth who remains a fugitive.
punchng.com
No comments:
Post a Comment