Hewlett-Packard Agrees to Plead Guilty to Bribery Violations Pay $100 Million in Penalties
Hewlett-Packard Agrees to Plead Guilty to Bribery
Violations Pay $100 Million in Penalties
Hewlett-Packard Russia Agrees to Plead Guilty to
Foreign Bribery Violations
HP Subsidiaries in Poland and Mexico also admit
Misconduct;
HP to Pay More Than $100 Million in Criminal and
Regulatory Penalties to the Department of Justice and the SEC
WASHINGTON—
ZAO Hewlett-Packard A.O. (HP Russia), an
international subsidiary of the California technology company Hewlett-Packard
Company (HP Co.), has agreed to plead guilty to felony violations of the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and admit its role in bribing Russian
government officials to secure a large technology contract with the Office of
the Prosecutor General of the Russian Federation.
Deputy Assistant Attorney General Bruce Swartz of
the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Melinda Haag of the
Northern District of California, Assistant Director in Charge Valerie Parlave
of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, and Chief Richard Weber of the Internal
Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) made the announcement.
A criminal information filed today in U.S.
District Court for the Northern District of California charges HP Russia with
conspiracy and substantive violations of the anti-bribery and accounting
provisions of the FCPA. In addition, the government is entering into criminal
resolutions with HP subsidiaries in Poland and Mexico relating to contracts
with Poland’s national police agency and Mexico’s state-owned petroleum
company, respectively. Pursuant to a deferred prosecution agreement, the
department filed a criminal information charging Hewlett-Packard Polska, Sp. Z
o.o. (HP Poland) with violating the accounting provisions of the FCPA.
Hewlett-Packard Mexico, S. de R.L. de C.V. (HP Mexico) has entered into a
non-prosecution agreement with the government pursuant to which it will forfeit
proceeds and admit and accept responsibility for its misconduct as set forth in
the statement of facts. In total, the three HP entities will pay $76,760,224 in
criminal penalties and forfeiture.
In a related FCPA matter, the U.S. Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) filed a proposed final judgment to which HP Co.
consented. Under the terms of the proposed final judgment, HP Co. agreed to pay
$31,472,250 in disgorgement, prejudgment interest, and civil penalties,
bringing the total amount of U.S. criminal and regulatory penalties paid by HP
Co. and its subsidiaries (collectively, HP) to more than $108 million.
“Hewlett-Packard subsidiaries created a slush fund
for bribe payments, set up an intricate web of shell companies and bank
accounts to launder money, employed two sets of books to track bribe
recipients, and used anonymous e-mail accounts and prepaid mobile telephones to
arrange covert meetings to hand over bags of cash,” said Deputy Assistant
Attorney General Swartz. “Even as the tradecraft of corruption becomes more
sophisticated, the department is staying a step ahead of those who choose to
violate our laws, thanks to the diligent efforts of U.S. prosecutors and agents
and our colleagues at the SEC, as well as the tremendous cooperation of our law
enforcement partners in Germany, Poland, and Mexico.”
“The United States Attorney’s Office, working
alongside our colleagues in the Criminal Division, will vigorously police any
efforts by companies in our district to illegally sell products to foreign
governments using bribes or kickbacks in violation of the FCPA,” said U.S.
Attorney Haag. “Today’s resolution with HP reinforces the fact that there is no
double standard: U.S. businesses must respect the same ethics and compliance
standards whether they are selling products to foreign governments or to the
United States government.”
“This case demonstrates the FBI’s ability to successfully
coordinate with our foreign law enforcement partners to investigate and bring
to justice corporations that choose to do business through bribery and
off-the-book dealings,” said Assistant Director in Charge Parlave. “I want to
thank the agents who worked on this case in Washington, New York, and in our
Legal Attaché offices in Mexico City, Moscow, Berlin, and Warsaw, as well as
the prosecutors. Their work ensures a level playing field for businesses
seeking lucrative overseas government contracts.”
“This agreement is the result of untangling a
global labyrinth of complex financial transactions used by HP to facilitate
bribes to foreign officials,” said IRS-CI Chief Weber. “IRS-CI has become a
trusted leader in pursuit of corporations and executives who use hidden
offshore assets and shell companies to circumvent the law. CI is committed to
maintaining fair competition, free of corrupt practices, through a potent
synthesis of global teamwork and our dynamic financial investigative talents.”
According to court documents, in 1999, the Russian
government announced a project to automate the computer and telecommunications
infrastructure of its Office of the Prosecutor General of the Russian
Federation (GPO). Not only was that project itself worth more than $100
million, but HP Russia viewed it as the “golden key” that could unlock the door
to another $100 to $150 million dollars in business with Russian government
agencies. To secure a contract for the first phase of project, ultimately
valued at more than €35 million, HP Russia executives and other employees
structured the deal to create a secret slush fund totaling several million
dollars, at least part of which was intended for bribes to Russian government
officials.
As admitted in a statement of facts, HP Russia
created excess profit margins for the slush fund through an elaborate buy-back
deal structure, whereby (1) HP sold the computer hardware and other technology
products called for under the contract to a Russian channel partner, (2) HP
bought the same products back from an intermediary company at a nearly €8
million mark-up and paid the intermediary an additional €4.2 million for
purported services, and (3) HP sold the same products to the GPO at the
increased price. The payments to the intermediary were then largely transferred
through a cascading series of shell companies—some of which were directly
associated with government officials—registered in the United States, United
Kingdom, British Virgin Islands, and Belize. Much of these payments from the
intermediary were laundered through off-shore bank accounts in Switzerland,
Lithuania, Latvia, and Austria. Portions of the funds were spent on travel,
cars, jewelry, clothing, expensive watches, swimming pool technology,
furniture, household appliances, and other luxury goods. To keep track of these
corrupt payments, the conspirators inside HP Russia kept two sets of books:
secret spreadsheets that detailed the categories of recipients of the corrupt
funds and sanitized versions that hid the corrupt payments from others outside
HP Russia. They also entered into off-the-books side agreements. As one
example, an HP Russia executive executed a letter agreement to pay €2.8 million
in purported “commission” fees to a U.K.-registered shell company that was
linked to a director of the Russian government agency responsible for managing
the GPO project. HP Russia never disclosed the existence of the agreement to
internal or external auditors or management outside of HP Russia and conducted
no due diligence of the shell company.
According to an agreed statement of facts, in
Poland, from 2006 through at least 2010, HP Poland falsified HP books and
records and circumvented HP internal controls to execute and conceal a scheme
to corruptly secure and maintain millions of dollars in technology contracts
with the Komenda Główna Policji (KGP), the Polish National Police agency. HP
Poland made corrupt payments totaling more than $600,000 in the form of cash
bribes and gifts, travel, and entertainment to the KGP’s Director of
Information and Communications Technology. Among other things, HP Poland gave
the government official bags filled with hundreds of thousands of dollars of
cash; provided the official with HP desktop and laptop computers, mobile
devices, and other products; and took the official on a leisure trip to Las
Vegas, which included drinks, dining, entertainment, and a private tour flight
over the Grand Canyon. To covertly communicate with the official about the
corrupt scheme, an HP Poland executive used anonymous e-mail accounts, prepaid
mobile telephones, and other methods meant to evade detection.
In Mexico, according to the non-prosecution
agreement, HP Mexico falsified corporate books and records and circumvented HP
internal controls in connection with contracts to sell hardware, software, and
licenses to Mexico’s state-owned petroleum company, Petroleos Mexicanos
(Pemex). To secure the contracts, HP Mexico understood that it had to retain a
certain third-party consultant with close ties to senior executives of Pemex.
HP agreed to pay a $1.41 million “commission” to the consultant and hid the
payments by inserting into the deal structure another third party, which had
been approved by HP as a channel partner. HP Mexico made the commission payment
to the channel partner, which in turn forwarded the payments to the consultant.
Shortly thereafter, the consultant paid one of the Pemex officials
approximately $125,000.
Court filings acknowledge HP Co.’s extensive
cooperation with the department, including conducting a robust internal
investigation, voluntarily making U.S. and foreign employees available for
interviews, and collecting, analyzing, and organizing voluminous evidence for
the department. Court filings also acknowledge the extensive anti-corruption remedial
efforts undertaken by HP Co., including taking appropriate disciplinary action
against culpable employees and enhancing HP Co.’s internal accounting,
reporting, and compliance functions.
The case is being investigated by the FBI’s
Washington Field Office, with assistance from the FBI’s New York City Field
Office and FBI Legal Attache offices in Mexico City, Moscow, Berlin, and
Warsaw, and the IRS-CI’s Oakland Field Office. The case is being prosecuted by
Trial Attorneys Ryan Rohlfsen and Jason Linder of the Criminal Division’s Fraud
Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Adam Reeves of the Northern District of
California. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs also
provided significant assistance in this matter.
The Justice Department expresses its deep
appreciation for the significant assistance provided by the SEC’s Division of
Enforcement, the Polish Anti-Corruption Bureau (CBA), the Polish Appellate
Prosecutor’s Office, the Public Prosecutor’s Office in Dresden, Germany, and
our law enforcement partners in Mexico, the United Kingdom, Lithuania, Latvia,
Italy, Spain, and Hungary.
Source – FBI
Thursday, April 10, 2014
Tags – HP Bribery Violations Fine
2 comments:
Corporates and MNCs may get involved in corruption (esp. in third-world countries) *more frequently * than we think. And it may not be restricted just to the Govt. sector.
Destination Infinity
@Destination Infinity
thanks.