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Re: tryoty post# 151183

Monday, 02/09/2009 10:35:18 PM

Monday, February 09, 2009 10:35:18 PM

Post# of 361526
tryoty> Here are some FACTS that might shed some light on the subject.

The US Government has FORMALLY charged KBR for bribes related to a NIGERIAN Nat Gas facility that happended over 10 years ago. The report staes it was a "decade long investigation" , I would think the board would be bery interested in this information, this IS very FACTUAL information and extremly to the point ON-TOPIC. See post I replied to and post you replied to , AND I have read literally HUNDREDS of posts ON THIS BOARD RE: Statue of limitations as it relates to formal FCPA charges against ERHC Energy (ERHE), you guess, I guess, Everyone guesses, everyone posts opinions on it , This is the FIRST TIME I have read some concrete evidence that the US Government CAN and WILL charge companies with violations of the FCPA act a DECADE after the bribe was comiited.... Very interesting and on topic dont you think?

KBR booked in Nigeria graft case
Wire services

The US government has formally charged engineering services company KBR in a $180 million, decade-long scheme to bribe Nigerian officials to secure $6 billion in contracts.

But former KBR parent Halliburton said last month it would pay $559 million to end the investigation if the government approved the settlement, which was the largest penalty against a US company for bribery charges under federal law.

The alleged bribes were paid between 1994 and 2004 to secure four contracts for a KBR joint venture to build and expand Nigeria's Bonny Island liquefied natural gas terminal, according to the government.

KBR was charged with five counts, including conspiracy to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA).

A truly multi-national scheme, it involved partner companies from Italy, France and Japan, and huge sums of money wired through banks in Amsterdam and New York to accounts in Monaco and Switzerland.

KBR also used shell companies in Portugal, referred to by the government as Madeira Companies 1, 2 and 3, in an effort to avoid breaking the FCPA law, the government said.

"KBR avoided placing US citizens on the board of managers of Madeira Company 3 as a further part of KBR's intentional effort to insulate itself from FCPA liability," according to the government prosecutors' filing with the US District Court for the Southern District of Texas.

The consortium that built the LNG facility included KBR, France's Technip, Italy's Snamprogetti and Japan's JGC.

Albert "Jack" Stanley, a former KBR chief executive, pleaded guilty last September to charges stemming from the Nigeria bribes and agreed to co-operate with investigators.

KBR declined to make any further comment late on Friday, Reuters reported.


http://www.upstreamonline.com/live/article171642.ece