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FM
Former Member

Stabroek News

Louis Berger International Inc, a New-Jersey-based construction management company that won contracts here, will pay a US$17.1 million criminal fine to resolve charges that it bribed officials to win government contracts abroad, the US Justice Department said on Friday, according to Reuters.

Two former executives also pleaded guilty to charges brought under the Foreign and Corrupt Practices Act, the department said.

According to prosecutors, the company and its employees bribed officials in India, Indonesia, Viet-nam and …........

 

What the Guyanese think?

 -

James McAllister, Vincent Alexander, Dr. Joseph and others paid the ultimate price for challenging the thee Opposition Leader Corbin.

To think how important Alexander was to the integrity of 2011 election that allowed the opposition to rightfully get its one seat majority.

Now we hear that Mc Allister sounded the warning bell on this company, but was not headed.

Dr. Joseph himself in at UG, in charge of its Medical Program.

Luckily Aubrey Norton is back from his own exile and is an advisor to the President.

Shudder to think how richer this government would be with them in the fold.

 

OBSERVER  -

Certain former government operatives are probably laughing their heads off while reading this news item ... or maybe they are in fact shivering in their boots!

And I might also wonder what those who come on here and gibbly talk about "witch hunt" have to say about how crimes of bribery and corruption are dealth with in the developed world, when those big-time criminals are caught.

 

 

The Financial Express

Sunday, Jul 19, 2015
 

US co Louis Berger to pay $17.1 million fine to settle bribery charges, including in India.

 

Louis Berger International Inc, a New-Jersey-based construction management company, will pay a $17.1 million criminal fine to resolve charges that it bribed officials to win government contracts abroad, the U.S. Justice Department said on Friday.

Two former executives also pleaded guilty to charges brought under the Foreign and Corrupt Practices Act, the department said.

According to prosecutors, the company and its employees bribed officials in India, Indonesia, Vietnam and Kuwait between 1998 and 2010 to obtain government construction management contracts.

About $3.9 million in bribes were paid to foreign officials, prosecutors said, including by the two former executives Richard Hirsch, 61, and James McClung, 59.

 

Hirsch was Louis Berger’s senior vice president for Indonesia, Thailand, the Philippines and Vietnam. McClung was a senior vice president in India and Vietnam.

The illegal payments were disguised as “commitment fees,” “counterpart per diems,” and third-party vendor payments, the Justice Department said.

Louis Berger said in a statement that the three-year deferred prosecution agreement resulted from its own self-reporting to the Justice Department since 2010, the year the company agreed to pay more than $69 million to the U.S. government to settle charges for overbilling between 2001 and 2007.

“Today’s settlement is the critical final milestone in our reform, as it was important for us to take responsibility for the historic actions of former managers and close the chapter on the company’s pre-2010 era,” Louis Berger Chairman Nicholas J. Masucci said in a statement.

The company added that since 2010, it improved its internal controls, policies and procedures and that a government-appointed compliance monitor would test and report on them over the next three years.

Louis Berger, which is headquartered in Morristown, operates in more than 50 countries and has about 6,000 employees, according to its website.

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Corruption should never be tolerated however, this must be proven beyond doubt.  The new GoG now has the mandate do all the investigations and bring whatever charges are warranted.  The people of Guyana deserve to know the truth and any ill-gotten wealth should be promptly returned to the people.

FM
Originally Posted by baseman:

Corruption should never be tolerated however, this must be proven beyond doubt. 

And what exactly would you and your fellow PPP followers mean by "proven beyond doubt"? Are you suggesting that persons who has amazed wealth over and above their declared method and means of income, or acquired property and land at a cost well below the market value and through a process that was not transparent would not have anything to answer for?

Mr.T
Originally Posted by Mr.T:
Originally Posted by baseman:

Corruption should never be tolerated however, this must be proven beyond doubt. 

And what exactly would you and your fellow PPP followers mean by "proven beyond doubt"? Are you suggesting that persons who has amazed wealth over and above their declared method and means of income, or acquired property and land at a cost well below the market value and through a process that was not transparent would not have anything to answer for?

As I said, prove fraud and if they cannot account for their wealth, then you have the right to impose tax for unreported income.  That in itself is a serious breach.  The reconciliation of assets to declared income is a standard process in such investigation.  I have no issue, but follow due process.

FM

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