FCPA verus Bribery Act versus PCA – CNBC-TV18 -

I think India Inc is the cleanest place to do business in. No honestly; I can’t recall one reported case of corporate corruption in India this year. Not one. Well actually in November the CBI made several arrests in the bribes for loans case but that’s small stuff. Can you recall the last time any large well-known company in India was prosecuted for corruption? I can’t!

Now get this – the 2010 list of offenders under USA’s Foreign Corrupt Practices Act includes the BAE, Daimler, Alcatel Lucent, Royal Dutch Shell, Noble Corporation. Meanwhile, this year the UK passed its Bribery Act, that is wider in scope and tougher in punishment than even the FCPA. India too has a prevention of corruption act, but it lies unused. Wouldn’t it be ironical if a corrupt Indian company escapes Indian law but gets caught by foreign anti-corruption laws? Payaswini Upadhyay tells you why that’s an imminent possibility.

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In a country where the criminal code is over 150 years old and company and tax laws over 50, the prevention of corruption law enacted in 1988 qualifies as rather young.

The PCA is actually fairly broad and all encompassing. It primarily hits at government officials or public officials who obtain any sort of gratification for anything that they would do which would be rendering some service which is out of turn or getting something done for something which is out of turn or even not doing something that they are supposed to do or delaying a certain approval that they need to get going for somebody. So in that sense, it covers a lot. The focus has obviously been on ‘public officials’ but there is also an abettment provision whereby any ordinary person who is not a public official or public servant who abetts in public official doing something that he isn’t supposed to do, then even that person can be liable under the Prevention of Corruption Act.

And yet in the 22 years of its existence…it has rarely ever been applied!

via FCPA verus Bribery Act versus PCA – CNBC-TV18 -.

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High Tide: From FIFA Fallout To Wikileaks Day 3 – Corruption Currents – WSJ

The BBC defended its reporting on alleged FIFA bribery in the 1990s, and the claims led to calls for delaying the vote on where to hold the 2018 and 2022 World Cups. A second target of the BBC documentary has denied taking bribes.  Oceania will not have a vote, which imperils the Australian 2022 bid, because its committee member is appealing his suspension amid a separate bribery probe. FIFA demanded an exemption from U.K. AML legislation as part of its bid for the 2018 World Cup. FIFA represents the corrosion of financial integrity, acccording to a column from Christian Aid. The association “battens down the hatches” as the claims mount.  (BBC, NY Times, Reuters, Reuters, Reuters, Guardian, Financial Task Force blog, Reuters)

GlaxoSmithKline said that the U.K. Bribery Act will hurt its business in China. (Daily Telegraph)

Roadblocks won’t stop Indonesia’s corruption fighters in their investigation into the appointment of a central bank president. (Jakarta Globe)

An update to Russian President Dmitry Medvedev’s anti-bribery drive: He said he wants to increase fines to 100 times the size of the bribe, and impose punishment on mediators of the transactions. (Bloomberg)

How do you begin to do FCPA due diligence? (TFoxLaw)

The WSJ Law blog asks whether the U.S. is doing enough–or too much–to combat foreign bribery.

What deters foreign bribery? Would your company accept amnesty at the cost of greater government intervention? (FCPA Blog, FCPA Blog)

The FCPAProfessor, who testified at the Senate Judiciary hearing, compiled opening testimony and C-SPAN coverage.

via High Tide: From FIFA Fallout To Wikileaks Day 3 – Corruption Currents – WSJ.

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Professor Says FCPA Enforcement Is A ‘Facade’ – Corruption Currents – WSJ

Butler University business law professor Mike Koehler, known to many as the FCPA Professor, after the blog he writes, has compiled a long list of criticisms of U.S. enforcement of the 33-year-old anti-bribery law.

In “The Facade of FCPA Enforcement,” published recently in the Georgetown Journal of International Law, Koehler describes “four pillars” that confound what he believes to be “the most important U.S. law governing international commerce.” (It’s also known as the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which bans U.S. and U.S.-listed companies from paying bribes to foreign officials to obtain or keep business.)

In the body of the article, Koehler wraps each pillar in a study of recent FCPA cases, but we’ll rattle them off here: Enforcement actions are resolved based on “uninformative, bare-bones” statements of facts; increasingly spring from “untested and dubious legal theories; are opaque and vary inexplicably from one to the next; and sometimes eschew bribery charges even when “clear-cut” instances of corporate bribery are alleged by the Justice Department and the Securities and Exchange Commission.

As the cases are almost always resolved through non-prosecution or deferred-prosecution agreements or pleas, the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act has largely escaped judicial scrutiny. The upshot, according to Koehler, is “in many instances, the FCPA means simply what the DOJ and SEC say it means.”

via Professor Says FCPA Enforcement Is A ‘Facade’ – Corruption Currents – WSJ.

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DOJ Strengthening Its Fraud Section, Wiretap Unit – Corruption Currents – WSJ

The use of wiretaps in the Galleon insider-trading case and the FBI’s undercover work in the “Shot Show Takedown” this year threw into sharp relief the Justice Department’s willingness to apply the same gritty investigatory techniques it uses to fight mobsters to combat white-collar crime.

The government’s investigation of Raj Rajaratnam, the co-founder of the hedge fund Galleon Group, marked the first time the department used a wiretap in an insider-trading case. (Rajaratnam is fighting to keep the wiretap evidence out of court, saying the department obtained the warrants through misdirection.)

The FBI’s arrest in January of 22 men in the military and police equipment on suspicion of violating foreign bribery law represented the first sting operation, with undercover agents and a government informant, in a Foreign Corrupt Practices Act investigation. (Some of the defendants have indicated they will argue entrapment.)

Assistant Attorney General Lanny Breuer, head of Criminal Division, promised Thursday that these techniques would be commonplace in white-collar cases going forward.

The department, he said, has “substantially increased” the number of lawyers who work in the division’s Office of Enforcement Operations, the unit that reviews and approves applications for federal wiretaps around the country.

“As a result, the number of wiretaps we authorize – in all types of cases – has gone up,” Breuer said Thursday during a speech at the Practising Law Institute in New York City, according to his prepared remarks.

via DOJ Strengthening Its Fraud Section, Wiretap Unit – Corruption Currents – WSJ.

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Obama Highlights Anti-Corruption Measure for Mining and Energy | Business Ethics

A new U.S. measure designed to combat corruption in resource-rich countries by requiring mining and energy companies to disclose payments to foreign governments was highlighted this week by U.S. President Barack Obama in a speech at the United Nations Millennium Development Goals Summit in New York.

The requirement is a provision of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act signed into law by Mr. Obama in July.

Section 1504 of the Act mandates that publicly -held “resource extraction” companies disclose, in their annual reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, information regarding payments made to any foreign government or the U.S. federal government for the purpose of the commercial development of oil, natural gas or minerals.

In his speech to the U.N. General Assembly, Mr. Obama cited a need for “broad-based economic growth” among nations, but he also noted “certain ingredients upon which sustainable growth and lasting development depends” and which may be lacking in cases.

via Obama Highlights Anti-Corruption Measure for Mining and Energy | Business Ethics.

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Deutsche Telekom Is Focus of Corruption Investigation – NYTimes.com

German prosecutors confirmed Wednesday that they have opened an investigation to determine whether officials at Deutsche Telekom, including the current chief executive, pressured government officials in Macedonia to keep competitors out of the market.

Jan van Rossum, the assistant prosecutor in Bonn, said his office took up its investigation at the request of the U.S. Justice Department and Securities and Exchange Commission in Washington. U.S. officials have been investigating Deutsche Telekom’s dealings in the former Yugoslavia since 2006, and provided documents to prosecutors in Bonn this summer, he said.

In August, German investigators searched the homes and offices of chief executive Rene Obermann and several former Deutsche Telekom board members, Mr. Van Rossum said, declining to name the other executives. They took files and other documents from the offices, he said.

“This is a probe to determine if there is a basis for further investigation and charges,” Mr. Van Rossum said in an interview. “We are required by law to check out whether these allegations are true or whether they can be dismissed.”

The probe stems from 2000-2005, when units of the Hungarian telecommunications company, Magyar Telekom, made 31 million euros, or about $40 million, in improper payments to consulting companies and lobbying firms in Macedonia and Montenegro, where Magyar Telekom owns two subsidiaries.

via Deutsche Telekom Is Focus of Corruption Investigation – NYTimes.com.

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Acquisition May Create Headaches for Merck in Foreign Corruption Probe | BNET

Merck (MRK) disclosed in its quarterly 10-Q filing that it is the subject of an investigation by the Department of Justice and the SEC for possible violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (which prohibits paying bribes to do business in foreign countries). The investigation comes with a bit of unspoken history — and some potential risk created by Merck’s recent acquisition of Schering-Plough.

Merck says “this inquiry is part of a broader review of pharmaceutical industry practice.” That’s true: at least 10 other companies are suspected of doing the same thing, and an 11th — SciClone (SCLN.O) popped up Tuesday.

However, the fuller context is that the letters are more serious than a “review.” A DOJ assistant attorney general warned an assemblage of pharma industry lawyers last year that DOJ “will be intensely focused on rooting out foreign bribery in your industry.” A similar criminal investigation has already led to the imprisonment of one executive at Johnson & Johnson (JNJ) in the U.K., and J&J admitted in its most recent 10-Q that it had violated anti-corruption laws and that investigations are under way in several nations, including the United States.

via Acquisition May Create Headaches for Merck in Foreign Corruption Probe | BNET.

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Compliance comes calling | The Economic Times

Take an Indian conglomerate preparing to acquire a Belgian company. The last thing it needs to worry about is US criminal laws, right? Wrong — and indeed, buying the Belgian concern without thoroughly analysing its compliance profile could mean buying tens of millions of dollars in criminal liability.

The compliance challenges posed by the vigorous pursuit by the US of alleged Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) transgressors have been compounded as other countries, most prominently Germany and the UK, have adopted and begun active enforcement of anti-foreign corruption laws of their own.

On January 19, for example, the US unveiled 22 indictments of individuals, including UK citizen Pankesh Patel, as a result of an undercover operation with FBI agents posing as sales agents offering to corruptly facilitate foreign contracts. Patel and 20 other defendants were handcuffed in front of their peers right on the floor of a Las Vegas trade show.

In his allegedly corrupt pursuit of defence contracts in Africa, Patel had meetings within the US, and sent paperwork in furtherance of the underlying scheme to the US. His indictment is an application of FCPA provisions catching foreign persons that take steps within the US to further overseas corruption.

For Indian companies that are issuers of US securities , no such actions within the US would even be required.

For our hypothetical Belgian marketing company, though not directly subject to the FCPA, it might have FCPA liability if it had corruptly carried out business operations for US companies, or sent dollar-denominated wire transfers for corrupt purposes.

Another trend worth noting for non-US companies is the expectation of active supervision on the part of senior corporate executives.

US enforcers have held executives at headquarters responsible for misconduct occurring in the field, on the basis that the executives failed to supervise far-flung personnel or failed to design internal controls to prevent misconduct.

Other countries are also raising the bar to prevent bribery. In part, this is due to diplomatic pressure from the US but also the efforts of the OECD and the UN, both of whom have sponsored conventions that are now in place mandating that their signatories take certain actions in the fight against corruption. India is party to the UN convention.

The Siemens case in which it paid a record settlement of $800 million in fines and disgorgement of profits was mirrored by a fine of equal magnitude paid to the German regulator.

via Compliance comes calling-Opinion-The Economic Times.

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Murky world of corruption in China | BBC News

Bribery and other forms of corruption are problems often encountered by foreign businesses operating in China.

This can result in companies providing clients with expensive trips abroad, lavish meals and red envelopes stuffed with money.

But not all businesses get drawn into this murky world; some say they abide by the same high standards they observe elsewhere.

And one foreign business advisor said firms that supply good products and services will always do well – even if they refuse to be corrupt.

The use of bribery in the business world in China has come into sharp focus because of the trial involving four executives working for the Anglo-Australian mining firm Rio Tinto.

The four were sentenced in Shanghai to between seven and 14 years in prison for taking bribes and stealing commercial secrets.

But how much of a problem is bribery for foreign firms operating in China?

One British businessman, who did not want to be named, said it was a big problem, particularly in China’s smaller cities.

He told the BBC of one occasion when he was trying to set up a joint venture company with a Chinese partner in Shandong province.

Negotiations had been going on for weeks, without any success, he said. Then, at one meeting, he was asked to step outside for a chat with an official.

“He said all the problems could be overcome – so I asked him how. He said it could be done if I gave him 1m yuan ($146,000: £98,000),” said the businessman.

via BBC News – Murky world of corruption in China.

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Global Integrity Drops China From Corruption-Watch List – WSJ.com

China was one of three countries dropped from a corruption-watch list created by non-profit anti-corruption group Global Integrity, which released its annual report earlier this week.

The other countries removed from the watch list were Georgia and Serbia. The Washington, D.C.-based group warned that being dropped from the list doesn’t mean corruption stopped in the countries, but rather that they made progress by establishing minimum anti-corruption safeguards.

via Global Integrity Drops China From Corruption-Watch List – WSJ.com.

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