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Brazilian oil company settles FCPA violations for $853 million to U.S. and Brazil

Financial Crimes FCPA DOJ SEC

Financial Crimes

On September 27, 2018, the DOJ announced that a Brazilian state-owned oil company had entered into a Non-Prosecution Agreement with the DOJ, as well as settlement agreements with the SEC and Brazilian authorities, and agreed to pay a total $853.2 million in penalties to all jurisdictions. Under the terms of the settlement, DOJ and SEC will each receive 10 percent of the penalty amount, with Brazilian authorities receiving the remaining 80 percent.

As part of the settlement, the company admitted that its Executive Board members “were involved in facilitating and directing millions of dollars in corrupt payments to politicians and political parties in Brazil,” while directors were “involved in facilitating bribes that a major contractor of the company was paying to Brazilian politicians.” The conduct included bribes related to several refineries, as well as shipyard and drillship contracts, as well as payments to “stop a parliamentary inquiry into the company's contracts.”

The company's penalty reflects a 25 percent discount off the low end of the applicable U.S. Sentencing Guidelines due to its cooperation and remediation. While the company did not voluntary disclose its conduct, it cooperated with authorities by disclosing the findings of its internal investigation, providing document discovery, and facilitating the interview of foreign witnesses. It also took remedial measures by replacing its Board of Directors and Executive Board, as well as implementing reforms in its policies and procedures.

In addition to the criminal penalty, the SEC announced that the company agreed to an administrative order requiring it to pay almost $1 billion in disgorgement and prejudgment interest. However, the company received full credit for payments it already made to resolve a class action for $2.95 billion earlier this year. The net result is that the company will not have to pay any additional funds to the SEC in the separate disgorgement action.

Prior ScoreCard coverage of the company and related investigations can be found here.