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						Shell reviews deals involving ex-executive accused of 
						bribery
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		 [December 06, 2018]   
		By Ron Bousso 
 LONDON (Reuters) - Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.AS> 
		has concluded that a Nigerian oilfield sale where it suspects an 
		executive took bribes was not linked to a separate court case in which 
		he and Shell face corruption charges over a $1.1 billion offshore 
		acquisition.
 
 The Anglo-Dutch company filed a criminal complaint in March against 
		Peter Robinson, a former vice president for sub-Saharan Africa, saying 
		he took bribes in the $390 million sale of onshore Oil Mining Lease (OML) 
		42 to a Nigerian firm.
 
 Robinson is also one of several former Shell employees involved in a 
		trial in Milan, in which Shell and Italy's Eni <ENI.MI> are accused of 
		corruption related to the $1.1 billion purchase of a giant Nigerian 
		offshore field, Oil Prospecting Licence (OPL) 245.
 
 Both the OML 42 and OPL 245 deals were signed in 2011.
 
		
		 
		
 Shell, the largest foreign investor in Nigeria, said in a statement to 
		Reuters that it had completed an internal review of the OML 42 sale 
		process and other deals Robinson was involved in, and it concluded his 
		only violation was related to OML 42.
 
 Shell, Eni and Robinson deny any wrongdoing in the OPL 245 case. 
		Robinson also denies any wrongdoing in the OML 42 sale.
 
 Regarding the OML 42 sale, Shell said: "We have found no evidence to 
		suggest that this was anything other than an isolated breach by a former 
		employee, operating deliberately outside of Shell systems or controls."
 
 "We have also found no evidence of a connection between Robinson's 
		actions on OML 42 and OPL 245, and we have reconfirmed this to the Dutch 
		Public Prosecutor," Shell said.
 
 
		
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			The logo of a Shell gas station is pictured in Ulm, Germany, April 
			6, 2017. REUTERS/Michaela Rehle/File Photo 
             
Shell filed its complaint against Robinson to the Dutch prosecutor.
 The Dutch prosecutor's officer confirmed on Thursday it had received further 
information from Shell but offered no additional comment, saying it was still 
evaluating all the information and determining next steps.
 
Robinson's lawyer Chiara Padovani said her client "denies any allegations of 
criminal misconduct in connection with OML 42." She also said Robinson "agrees 
with Shell's conclusion that the sale of OML 42 is unrelated to OPL 245." 
 A source told Reuters in March that documents related to the OML 42 case had 
been uncovered after investigators looking into OPL 245 raided a house in Perth, 
Australia owned by Robinson.
 
 Milan prosecutors allege bribes totaling about $1.1 billion were paid, including 
to middlemen, to win the OPL 245 deal for Shell and Eni.
 
 Shell has said it expects the case in Italy to last many months.
 
 (Reporting by Ron Bousso; Additional reporting by Bart Meijer in Amsterdam; 
Editing by Edmund Blair)
 
				 
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