How to Keep Your Company Off of the Government’s Naughty List | Corporate Counsel (Ryan McConnell & Katelyn Richardson)

The holiday season is here. The 2010 U.K. Bribery Act is on the books. And enforcement of the U.S. Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) is on the rise. Gift baskets began arriving in the corporate mailroom weeks ago. But holiday gifts can raise conflict of interest issues and may be viewed as bribery depending upon the intent of the giver and value of the gift. Recent bribery cases against companies involving gifts include Alcatel-Lucent, RAE Systems, and Innospec. In-house counsel should ensure their corporate gift policy protects the company from government scrutiny.

Gifts can be particularly problematic for antibribery compliance programs. Thirty-eight countries have adopted the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development’s Antibribery Convention and enacted laws against foreign bribery. Both the FCPA and the U.K. Bribery Act prohibit gifts intended to influence decisions to award business or gain an improper benefit from foreign political or government officials, including employees of state-controlled entities. The U.K. Bribery Act and the U.S. Travel Act both outlaw commercial bribery involving gifts intended to influence business decisions.

via How to Keep Your Company Off of the Government’s Naughty List.

Quest for Patents Brings New Focus in Tech Deals – NYTimes.com

Wall Street bankers and technology executives have been busy with their calculators in the wake of Google’s $12.5 billion offer for Motorola Mobililty.

It isn’t just the rich 63 percent premium for the cellphone company that has them rethinking valuations, but how Google justified its price by pointing to Motorola’s trove of patents.

Now other companies with large mobile patent portfolios, like Alcatel-Lucent, Kodak, Research in Motion and Nokia are being scrutinized as possible targets for licensing deals or full-on takeovers.

”The Motorola deal was a seismic event,” said Ronald S. Laurie, a former intellectual property lawyer who is now managing director of patent advisory firm Inflexion Point Strategy. Patents are now driving mergers and acquisitions, he said, “and that’s driving up valuations.”

via Quest for Patents Brings New Focus in Tech Deals – NYTimes.com.

Alcatel Finalizes Multimillion-Dollar Bribery Settlement | Law.com

French telecommunications company Alcatel-Lucent SA finalized its settlement Wednesday with the U.S. over bribes paid to officials in Costa Rica, Honduras, Malaysia and Taiwan.

The deal concluded in Miami federal court includes a $92 million penalty as part of a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department. Alcatel also has already paid another $45 million to settle a related Securities and Exchange Commission case and $10 million in a corruption case brought by the Costa Rican government.

“It is one of the largest resolutions in the history of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act,” said Charles Duross, a top Justice Department fraud prosecutor.

Three Alcatel subsidiaries pleaded guilty to violating the anti-bribery law and will pay a combined $1.5 million in fines. The pleas were entered Wednesday by Steven R. Reynolds, general counsel of parent company Alcatel-Lucent.

Prosecutors said the bribes enabled Alcatel to win numerous multimillion-dollar telecommunications contracts in the four countries and were deeply ingrained in the company’s business around the world. The illegal arrangements continued from at least the 1990s until late 2006, often using local consultants and agents as conduits to bribe foreign government officials.

via Alcatel Finalizes Multimillion-Dollar Bribery Settlement.

Justice Department, SEC cracking down on U.S. companies engaging in bribery abroad – The Washington Post

To win computer business with the South Korean government, IBM allegedly delivered cash bribes in shopping bags.

In pursuit of Ni­ger­ian construction contracts, Halliburton and its international business partners allegedly routed illicit payments through bank accounts in Switzerland and Monaco.

And a middleman for a middleman of the Italian energy company ENI allegedly made repeated trips to a Ni­ger­ian hotel room and handed over briefcases containing millions of dollars in U.S. currency to a government official. But paying the balance of the alleged $5 million bribe in the local currency was more problematic — the local bills were so bulky that the bagman allegedly had to deliver them by the carload.

These alleged schemes have come to light as part of an escalating effort by U.S. law enforcement officials against companies that engage in bribery abroad. Just last week, federal authorities announced they had charged IBM with corruptly pursuing contracts in Asia.

In recent years, the Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission have filed an increasing number of foreign corruption cases, charging companies such as Tyson Foods, General Electric, Alcatel-Lucent and Daimler, the maker of Mercedes-Benz cars and the former parent of Chrysler.

The cases reach from Latin America to Africa, Asia and the Middle East, involving contracts worth billions of dollars. Together, they suggest that illicit payments often tip the scales of global business — sometimes with the blessing of top corporate executives.

via Justice Department, SEC cracking down on U.S. companies engaging in bribery abroad – The Washington Post.

Alcatel-Lucent Pays $137 Million To Settle FCPA Probe – Corruption Currents – WSJ

French telecommunications company Alcatel-Lucent S.A. and three of its subsidiaries agreed to pay more than $137 million in fines and penalties to settle a foreign bribery investigation into illicit payments in Costa Rica, Honduras, Malaysia and Taiwan.

Philippe Wojazer/Reuters

Alcatel-Lucent Chief Executive Ben Verwaayen speaks during the company’s shareholders meeting in Paris on June 1, 2010. The company settled a foreign bribery investigation Monday with U.S. regulators by agreeing to pay $137 million in penalties and fines.

The company admitted it earned $48.1 million in profits from the improper payments, of which $45 million will be paid to the Securities and Exchange Commission in the form of a disgorgement penalty. Alcatel-Lucent said it will pay $92 million to settle Justice Department charges. It has already set aside the money, according to filings released in mid-February.

“Alcatel and its subsidiaries failed to detect or investigate numerous red flags suggesting their employees were directing sham consultants to provide gifts and payments to foreign government officials to illegally win business,” said Robert Khuzami, director of the SEC’s Division of Enforcement, in the statement. “Alcatel’s bribery scheme was the product of a lax corporate control environment at the company.”

The SEC alleged in its civil complaint that Alcatel’s subsidiaries used consultants who performed illegitimate work to funnel more than $8 million in bribes to government officials to obtain telecommunication contracts and other deals. The Justice Department said in a statement it filed a criminal information against Alcatel-Lucent charging one count of violating the internal controls provision of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, and one count of violating the books and records provision of the FCPA.

via Alcatel-Lucent Pays $137 Million To Settle FCPA Probe – Corruption Currents – WSJ.

FCPA Digest Reports Increased Prosecutions of Individuals, Emphasis on Industry Compliance — PRNewswire

“In some ways 2009 can be viewed as the calm before the FCPA storm,” says Philip Urofsky, a Washington-based partner at Shearman & Sterling and head of the firm's FCPA and Global Anti-Corruption Practice. “Unlike the prosecutions of Siemens and Halliburton/KBR in late 2008 and early 2009, which resulted in record-breaking penalties of $1.5 billion and $600 million, respectively, many of the corporate cases brought in 2009 involved smaller companies and smaller fines.”

“But,” he adds, “in recent weeks and months, BAE ($400 million), Technip ($400 million), Daimler ($200 million), Alcatel-Lucent ($200 million) and, most recently, ENI ($330 million) all announced that they had settled or were close to settling long-running FCPA investigations with the Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Commission. And a number of other companies have announced that they will complete their negotiations with the DOJ and SEC in the near future.”

“These prosecutions suggest that the Obama Administration intends to continue to put the pressure on foreign companies and foreign governments to honor their commitments under the OECD Convention and, in the interim, to fill the gap left by lax foreign enforcement through aggressive use of U.S. jurisdiction,” Urofsky adds. In addition, he noted, senior DOJ and SEC officials have promised a robust program of enforcement, including proactive initiatives focusing on specific business sectors, particularly the pharmaceutical industry.

From a numbers standpoint, FCPA prosecutions of individuals went up dramatically in 2009 – from 16 in 2008 to 42 in 2009. Corporate matters were down – from 18 matters initiated in 2008 to just 13 in 2009.

“Over the years, since the law’s inception in 1977, FCPA prosecutions have increased pretty consistently, with 2007 being a watershed year with particularly high activity,” explains Danforth Newcomb, the New York-based founder of Shearman & Sterling’s FCPA practice. “While we're not at the 2007 activity levels in terms of the overall number of corporate prosecutions, companies shouldn’t be lulled into a false sense of security that the government is any less interested in or committed to combating anti-corruption. Indeed, the use of aggressive investigatory tactics such as an undercover ‘sting’ operation and simultaneous arrests and search warrants in the law enforcement supply case demonstrates that the government has both the will and the resources to use prosecutions to punish wrong-doers and to deter others from following suit.”

via FCPA Digest Reports Increased Prosecutions of Individuals, Emphasis on Industry Compliance — NEW YORK, March 29 /PRNewswire/ –.

Alcatel-Lucent signs deal with U.S. on bribery case | Reuters

Telecoms equipment gear maker Alcatel-Lucent  set aside 93 million euros ($125.5 million) last quarter to settle a U.S. bribery investigation that began six years ago.

The Franco-American group said that it had reached agreements with the U.S. Department of Justice and the Securities and Exchange Committee under which it would pay fines, be put on a three-year probationary period, and be subject to a French anti-corruption monitor.

In exchange, the Department of Justice would defer prosecution of the company over charges that it violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act's anti-bribery provisions.

The accord must be approved by U.S. courts in order to take effect, according to a February 11 regulatory filing from Alcatel-Lucent.

“If finalized, the agreements would relate to alleged violations of the FCPA involving several countries, including Costa Rica, Taiwan, and Kenya,” said the company in the filing.

The investigation centered on an Alcatel executive Christian Sapsizian who pleaded guilty in 2007 to arranging for bribes to be paid to Costa Rican officials to obtain mobile contracts.

via Alcatel-Lucent signs deal with U.S. on bribery case | Reuters.