Oil-trading bribery probe widens with new U.S. charges, guilty pleas
U.S. prosecutors charged a former U.S. employee of a Swiss energy trading firm with bribery and a Florida company pleaded guilty to bribery as a probe into corruption in energy trading widened in the United States.
Authorities in the United States and Brazil are
investigating improper payments to officials at Petrobras, Brazil’s state-run
oil company, as part of Brazil’s far-reaching corruption probe, known as Car
Wash. The latest U.S. court filings shed new light on the role of energy
traders in a scheme that has led to charges against hundreds of powerful
business leaders and politicians.
Petrobras said it has been collaborating with authorities
since 2014 and was a victim of the schemes.
Javier Aguilar, a former Vitol Group manager based in
Houston, was charged on Tuesday with conspiracy and money laundering involving
a $870,000 bribe to Ecuadorian government officials in order to win a $300
million oil contract. It marked the first indictment of an employee of a top
commodities trading house in the probe.
Aguilar, through his attorney, denied the allegations.
The U.S. investigation mirrors efforts in Brazil, where
prosecutors are also investigating people connected to trading houses Vitol,
Glencore GLEN.L and Trafigura [TRAFGF.UL], according to Brazilian court
documents. The U.S. Department of Justice involvement was spurred by the
involvement of U.S. banks in the alleged payments.
Aguilar was Vitol’s chief negotiator for the oil contract,
according to a person familiar with the matter. Aguilar set up contracts with
intermediaries in the United States to win the deal, the DOJ said in a release.
Vitol said it was aware of the U.S. charges and is
cooperating with authorities. The company has anti-bribery and corruption
policies and controls in place, a spokeswoman said.
Trafigura said it has a zero tolerance policy on bribery and
corruption. “Any suggestion that Trafigura’s current management knew that its
payments would be used to make improper payments to employees of Petrobras is
not correct,” Trafigura said.
Glencore declined to comment.
Luiz Eduardo Andrade, a Brazilian consultant, separately
pleaded guilty to acting as a go-between to win contracts with Brazil’s
Petrobras, according to a DOJ statement. Andrade did not reply to requests for
comment.
Sargeant Marine, a Florida company that once operated a
joint venture with Vitol, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to working with Andrade and
others to bribe officials in Brazil, Ecuador and Venezuela to win contracts for
asphalt, an oil-byproduct. The firm will pay a $16.6 million fine, the DOJ
said.
Sargeant Marine and Daniel Sargeant, the company’s top
executive, declined to comment through their attorneys.
Andrade and former Petrobras oil trader Rodrigo Berkowitz
were arrested in the United States in December 2018 as part of Brazil’s Car
Wash investigations. They have been cooperating with the DOJ and Brazil
prosecutors in parallel investigations targeting the oil trading houses,
according to two people close to the matter in Brazil.
Brazilian prosecutors said at the early stages of the
investigation in 2018 that the details being made public were just the “tip of
the iceberg” of an international corruption scheme in which trading firms would
bribe foreign officials to win contracts.
Petrobras this year lifted a ban imposed in 2018 on dealings
with traders Vitol, Glencore and Trafigura.
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