in

Sweden’s Ericsson to pay over $1bn to settle US corruption probe


People look at Ericsson's logo. File photo

Image copyright
Reuters

Image caption

Ericsson is one of world’s biggest makers of mobile network equipment

Sweden’s telecoms giant Ericsson has agreed to pay more than $1bn (£760m) to resolve allegations of bribery, the US Department of Justice has announced.

It said the company had “admitted to a years-long campaign of corruption in five countries to solidify its grip on telecommunications business”.

It added that Ericsson had entered into a deferred prosecution agreement in connection with criminal charges filed in a New York court.

Ericsson has so far made no comment.

The firm is one of world’s biggest makers of mobile network equipment.

What did the US justice department say?

Its statement said that Ericsson had agreed to pay the penalty to “resolve the government’s investigation into violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) arising out of the Company’s scheme to make and improperly record tens of millions of dollars in improper payments around the world”.

“Through slush funds, bribes, gifts, and graft, Ericsson conducted telecom business with the guiding principle that ‘money talks’,” said US Attorney Georffrey S Berman of the Southern District of New York.

“Today’s [Friday’s] guilty plea and surrender of over a billion dollars in combined penalties should communicate clearly to all corporate actors that doing business this way will not be tolerated,” he added.

The department said that Ericsson had operated its corrupt scheme “beginning in 2000 and continuing until 2016”.

The US justice department named the five countries involved as Djibouti, China, Vietnam, Indonesia and Kuwait.



Source link

BPA levels in humans dramatically underestimated — ScienceDaily

Riot creates its own publishing label, will produce single-player games in the League of Legends universe