Bribery
Alstom nearing $700 million
U.S. bribery settlement: source
By Aruna Viswanatha and Natalie Huet12
hours ago
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The
logo of Alstom is pictured on a building during an inaugural visit of the
Alstom offshore wind turbine …
By Aruna Viswanatha and
Natalie Huet
WASHINGTON/PARIS
(Reuters) - Alstom SA <ALSO.PA> is close to settling a bribery case with
the U.S. Justice Department for $700 million, a person close to the matter said
on Tuesday, in what would be the largest criminal fine levied by the United States
for foreign bribery.
A settlement could be
announced in the coming weeks, said the person, who declined to be named.
An Alstom spokeswoman
said the company does not comment on ongoing proceedings. A Justice Department
spokesman declined comment.
A top Justice Department
official said in a speech last month that Alstom executives along with Japanese
partner Marubeni Corp <8002.T> for many years engaged in a scheme to pay
millions of dollars in bribes to a high ranking member of the Indonesian
parliament and other Indonesian officials in exchange for help in securing a
$118 million contract in Indonesia.
Prosecutors have already
extracted guilty pleas from Marubeni and from three former Alstom executives
over the scheme, and charged a fourth who is awaiting trial.
At the November speech,
the head of the Justice Department's criminal division, Leslie Caldwell, said
she expected additional law enforcement actions in coming months.
A $700 million penalty
would be significantly higher than the $450 million Siemens AG paid in 2008 for
criminal violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, a 1970s law that bars
U.S.-linked companies from bribing officials of foreign governments to win
business.
In court filings related
to one Alstom executive's case, prosecutors said earlier this year they had
evidence that a former Alstom executive tried to bribe officials to secure
power projects not only in Indonesia but in India and China.
Alstom's power turbines
unit has been under pressure over the past year, hit by a drop in orders, a
cash crunch and the threat of hefty fines from several bribery probes.
Alstom agreed in June to
sell most of that power business to General Electric Co <GE.N> to focus
instead on its smaller rail arm. The deal will be put to the vote of Alstom
shareholders on Friday and is expected to close in the first half of 2015.
The $118 million
Indonesian contract, to provide services at a power plant on the island of Sumatra,
was completed in 2007 as part of a joint venture of Alstom and Marubeni.
The settlement was first
reported by Bloomberg News.
(Reporting
by Aruna Viswanatha in Washington and Natalie Huet in Paris; Editing by Keith
Weir and Steve Orlofsky)
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