A former oil trader at Geneva-based Vitol, one of the world's largest energy trading companies, was convicted on Friday of corruption charges stemming from more than $1 million in bribes he paid to officials in Ecuador and Mexico to win business.
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3 minutes
Reuters
A federal jury in Brooklyn found the trader guilty of three counts of foreign bribery, foreign bribery conspiracy, and money laundering conspiracy.
Federal prosecutors in Brooklyn said the trader sent bribe money from his Geneva-based employer to the officials through a series of middlemen and shell companies in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), a US law that prohibits paying bribes to foreign officials.
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“The people of Ecuador and Mexico deserved better and companies that play by the rules should know that the process is not rigged,” US Attorney Breon Peace in Brooklyn said in a statement.
The trader had pleaded not guilty. He faces up to 30 years in prison, but would likely get a lesser punishment.
“We disagree with the jury’s verdict and intend to appeal,” Daniel Koffmann, a lawyer for the trader, said in an email.
The defence had argued that the trader hired consultants he thought were legitimate to help Vitol win a 30-month, $300 million contract to ship crude produced by Ecuador’s state oil company Petroecuador in 2016.
It also said the consultants paid bribes without the trader’s knowledge, and that the payment structure was created by a top Vitol executive.
The trader was the first person to stand trial in the US as part of a sprawling Justice Department probe into commodity trading firms paying bribes to win business from state-run companies across Latin America, a scandal that has roiled energy markets from Mexico to Brazil.
Vitol in December 2020 admitted to bribing officials in Brazil, Mexico and Ecuador and agreed to pay $164 million to resolve US and Brazilian probes.
Rival trader Gunvor is bracing for a fine of up to $650 million to resolve US probes into its business dealings in Ecuador.
The trader’s eight-week trial featured testimony from several intermediaries and bribe recipients, who pleaded guilty and agreed to cooperate with prosecutors.
That included two former employees of a Houston-based subsidiary of Mexico’s state-owned oil company Pemex, who testified that the trader paid them around $600,000 in bribes to steer a $200 million contract for the supply of ethane gas toward Vitol.
The trader’s lawyers argued that the Pemex employees were not foreign officials, meaning the payments were not bribes under U.S. law.
The trader faces additional charges in federal court in Houston over the alleged Pemex scheme. He has pleaded not guilty.
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