Spanish phone giant Telefónica to pay $85M to resolve US probe of
Venezuelan bribery scheme
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[November 09, 2024] WASHINGTON (AP) — Spain's largest telecommunications operator will pay
more than $85 million to resolve a U.S. Justice Department investigation
into a scheme to bribe Venezuelan officials with a lavish Caribbean
vacation and expensive watches.
The agreement with Telefónica S.A. announced Friday is the second time
that the telco giant has faced bribery accusations in the U.S. after it
was ordered in 2019 to pay a $4.1 million penalty to the Securities and
Exchange Commission for providing tickets to the FIFA World Cup for
foreign officials it was seeking to influence.
The latest bribery scheme started around 2014, when a subsidiary of
Telefónica bribed two Venezuelan officials to participate in an auction
that allowed it to get U.S. dollars in exchange for Venezuelan bolivars,
Justice Department officials said.
Telefónica's Venezuelan subsidiary bought equipment at inflated prices
from unnamed multinational equipment suppliers, who through
intermediaries then paid the bribes on its behalf in an attempt to hide
the illegal scheme, prosecutors said.
In exchange, Telefónica received over $110 million in currency auctions
that were then the only way for foreign companies to get around strict
foreign exchange controls designed to curb capital flight and repatriate
earnings in bolivars decimated by years of triple-digit inflation. The
amount represented about 65% of the $172 million awarded to
telecommunications companies that year, prosecutors said in court
filings in Manhattan.
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“Telefónica Venezolana chose to support a corrupt regime to circumvent
the difficulties of conducting legal business in Venezuela," said
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole Argentieri, who leads
the Justice Department’s Criminal Division.
According to court records, a senior executive at Telefónica was
summoned to a meeting in May 2014 in which two unnamed officials
informed the executive that Telefónica would need to pay a “commission”
on any funds awarded in the currency auction.
Some of the proceeds from the scheme were used to fund a $500,000
vacation for one of the officials in Saint Barthelemy in the
French-speaking Caribbean. While there, another $605,000 was spent on
luxury watches and jewelry for the official and their spouse.
The subsidiary is charged in U.S. federal court with conspiracy to
violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act but will avoid prosecution
under an agreement with the Justice Department if it follows certain
conditions.
Telefónica has been operating in Venezuela, under the Movistar brand,
for two decades, one of 12 countries, most in Latin America, where it
has a presence. It currently has 8 million wireless customers in the
country.
Telefónica S.A. officials did not immediately respond to an email
seeking comment Friday.
—
AP writer Joshua Goodman in Miami contributed to this report.
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