New records obtained by the Paris-based Le Monde newspaper and the
International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ) have
unveiled more details on the $182 million Halliburton bribery scandal in
Nigeria that indicted several top government official, in the country
who received the bribes, but for which no Nigerian was ever sent to
jail.
Shockingly, the records have unearthed new Nigerian names never
previously linked to the Halliburton scandal for which the US oil
service giant was indicted by the US Securities and Exchange Commission
and US Justice Department, and was compelled to pay fines running into
hundreds of millions of dollars.
Those alleged to have received
bribes from a British lawyer, Jeffrey Tesler, included former military
head of state, General Abdulsalami Abubakar, his then chief of staff,
Major-General Chris Garba (rtd), his wife, Rita, and Andrew Agom, a
senior government official who was killed in an attack on a motorcade.
Starting
with the narrative of Tesler, who served as the conduit between
Halliburton's subsidiary KBR and Nigerian officials who were responsible
for approving the $6 billion turnkey contract for the Nigerian
Liquefied Natural Gas (NLNG) project in Bonny, Rivers State, the
documents revealed how Tesler on one occasion dropped off a bag stuffed
with $1 million in $100 dollar bills for an official at a foyer of a
luxury hotel in Abuja.
“There is no day when I do not regret my
weakness of character,” said the contrite British lawyer in a Houston
courtroom. “I allowed myself to accept standards of behaviour in a
business culture which can never be justified. I accepted the system of
corruption that existed in Nigeria. I turned a blind eye to what was
happening, and I am guilty of the offences charged.”
Tesler was
speaking at the end of his 2012 sentencing hearing after pleading guilty
to US corruption charges for his role in what became known as the
“Halliburton bribery scandal”.
A network of secretive banks and
offshore tax havens was used to funnel $182 million in bribes to
Nigerian officials in exchange for $6 billion in engineering and
construction work for an international consortium of companies that
included a then Halliburton subsidiary.
In 2010, Nigeria indicted
former US Vice-President Dick Cheney, who was CEO of Halliburton before
he was elected, only to later clear him when Halliburton worked out a
$35 million settlement.
Leaked records from HSBC, a huge global
bank based in London, have revealed new details about the bank’s role as
a conduit for the bribes — and new details about how Tesler operated.
The
files, obtained by the French newspaper Le Monde and ICIJ, showed ties
between Tesler and high-ranking Nigerians not previously named publicly
in connection with the scandal, raising the possibility of renewed
questions about Nigeria’s handling of the affair.
The Halliburton
bribery scandal dates to 1994 when the Nigerian government launched
ambitious plans to build the Bonny Island natural liquefied gas project.
Tesler
was then, in his own words, “a simple lawyer” from North London. He
grew from advising UK-based Nigerians on property deals to relishing his
relationships with successive Nigerian military and civilian
governments. Tesler began planning the bribe payments in 1994 and
transferred small amounts of money through Switzerland in July 1996. But
by 2003, his role had escalated.
In one brazen episode in the
Nigerian capital, Abuja, Tesler directed the drop-off of a travel bag
stuffed with $1 million in $100 bills in the foyer of a luxury hotel
where the per-night cost of a suite can exceed the nation’s average
annual income of $3,000. It was one of at least 20 money transfers that
Tesler made or directed. The cash was destined for Nigeria’s ruling
party via the state-owned oil and gas company, the Nigerian National
Petroleum Corporation (NNPC), according to an official Nigerian report.
Months
later, in April 2003, the governing party scored an overwhelming
victory in an election marred by vote rigging, fraud and violence that
led to the death of at least 100 people.
Switzerland’s famous bank
secrecy laws encouraged Tesler to use the country as base for moving
bribe money. And HSBC Private Bank (Suisse), with offices near luxury
hotels in Geneva and Zurich, was his preferred bank. When US authorities
seized 12 of Tesler’s Swiss accounts in 2013, five were with HSBC —more
than any other bank.
The files obtained by Le Monde and ICIJ
showed that nine people, including members of the Tesler family and
Nigerian nationals, held a variety of roles with accounts at HSBC
Private Bank (Suisse) between 1990 and 2003 — months before the
completion of the gas plant. Nine of the 12 accounts instructed HSBC to
keep all correspondence under lock and key in a bank safe.
Despite
Tesler being under investigation since 2003, HSBC continued to offer
advice, services and cash withdrawals to Tesler and his family, whose
accounts with the bank totalled tens of millions of dollars at one point
in 2006/2007. HSBC advised the family even though its individual files
for Tesler and those close to him include references to “criminal cases”
and “the Tesler affair.”
Tesler’s wife, Judy, is named in the
files as a beneficial owner and a controlling client of two accounts,
one of which was opened in 1999 and at one point in 2006 or 2007 held
$35.3 million. The files do not specify her role in relation to a third
account.
As he did with his wife, Tesler also transferred bribe
money into accounts in the names of his daughters, according to US and
French prosecutors. One daughter, Laura, then a twenty something
psychology student, according to the leaked files, became a millionaire —
at least on paper — through her beneficial ownership of an account
under the name of a Panamanian company that held almost $4 million.
Judy
Tesler and her daughters were not charged. On January 14, 2005 — 15
months after Tesler was first identified during a French corruption
investigation — Judy Tesler’s agent instructed HSBC to buy and sell
investments worth $380,000.
This account was frozen due to ongoing
criminal investigations, but HSBC staff waived the sale through. Months
later, bank staff met with one of the beneficial owners in London,
possibly Judy Tesler, to “review portfolios”.
In April 2005, HSBC
Private Bank (Suisse) recorded a visit from “J.T.,” likely to have been
Jeffrey Tesler, who collected mail and withdrew more than $10,000 in
cash from yet another account.
“If a bank has reason to believe
that funds are in any way related to criminal activity, then any
transfers in and out of the account should be reported,” Jimmy GurulĂ©, a
professor at Notre Dame University and a former assistant US attorney,
said in an interview with ICIJ.
“Banks should not permit their
clients to benefit from dirty money,” GurulĂ© said, adding that the fact
the account was later seized by authorities “raises some red flags over
why the bank concluded the account wasn’t linked to criminal activity
and authorised the sale.”
In response to ICIJ’s questions, an HSBC spokesman said the bank does not comment on specific clients.
The
leaked files reveal that Tesler had financial ties to two former
Nigerian officials: now-retired Major General Chris Garuba, chief of
staff to former Nigerian president Abdulsalami Abubakar, who himself
allegedly received bribes as president; and Andrew Agom, a senior
government official who was killed in an attack on a motorcade.
Bank
staff also responded to a request from Agom’s widow to unfreeze her
husband’s account, whose post was sent to Tesler’s North London law firm
and which was marked as subject to criminal investigations into Tesler.
The files do not indicate whether or not the account was ultimately
unfrozen.
Garuba, a former governor of Northeastern Bauchi state, is
now chairman of Obekpa Petroleum, a Nigerian oil company. Before his
death, Agom was a board member of the Peoples Democratic Party (PDP),
which controlled the government when this affair unfolded.
Agom
was the beneficial owner of an HSBC account linked to a Gibraltar-based
company, Hemisphere Services Limited, which held a maximum amount of
$797,377 at one point in 2006 or 2007.
Africa Confidential
magazine previously named a company, Hemisphere Services (Nigeria), as a
“recipient of largesse” from Tesler after viewing documents disclosed
to the magazine during a French corruption investigation.
Agom’s
account was opened in 1991 on the same day that an account was opened in
the name of former Nigerian Air Force Chief, Abdullahi Dominic Bello.
A
Nigerian government investigator has previously described Swiss
accounts held by Bello as a conduit for “slush funds”. The investigator
did not specifically mention HSBC.
The HSBC files identify Garuba and
his wife Rita as HSBC clients; their names are listed along with
Tesler’s in an account named Bridlington Enterprises Limited, for which
Tesler acted as an attorney. The files showed that the account was
opened the year before Tesler sent his first bribe payment to
Switzerland, although the files do not show that Tesler transferred
money into the Bridlington account, which held as much as $367,547 in
2006 or 2007.
Chris and Rita Garuba did not respond to ICIJ’s
requests for comment. Tesler was sentenced to 21 months in prison and he
forfeited $149 million from his Swiss accounts to the US government for
serving as the go-between for bribes paid to secure contracts for KBR,
the former Halliburton subsidiary, and the other consortium members, the
Japanese firm JGC Corporation, Paris-based Technip, as well as Italy’s
ENI S.p.A. and its Dutch subsidiary Snamprogetti Netherlands B.V.
Between
2009 and 2011, the consortium members paid penalties totalling more
than $1.5 billion for their roles in the bribery scheme. Two KBR
officials who had worked with Tesler, Wojciech Chodan and Albert (Jack)
Stanley, KBR’s former chairman and CEO, were sentenced to one year of
probation and 30 months in prison, respectively.
Cheney had been
chairman and chief executive of Halliburton, the parent company of KBR,
for five years — from 1995 to 2000 — before becoming US vice-president
in 2001.
Cheney’s lawyer has asserted repeatedly that his client
was not involved. “The Department of Justice and the Securities and
Exchange Commission investigated that joint venture extensively and
found no suggestion of any impropriety by Dick Cheney in his role of CEO
of Halliburton,” attorney Terrence O’Donnell wrote in a 2010 statement
to the Associated Press.
Meanwhile, Tesler, now 66, has served
his sentence and returned to England, where he told authorities he would
“spend the last few years, which God may graciously grant me, to seek
forgiveness.”
Jeffrey Tesler did not respond to ICIJ’s requests for comment.
In
Nigeria, anti-corruption campaigners continue to call on authorities to
identify and prosecute Nigerian citizens involved in the scandal. While
never publicly released, a 2010 Nigerian government document reportedly
included three Nigerian presidents, a vice-president, a minister,
intelligence chiefs and corporate titans in a list of bribery
beneficiaries. The report did not name Garuba or Agom.
“In terms
of the personalities and the amount of money involved it is probably the
biggest scandal in Nigeria’s history,” Dauda Garuba, Nigeria's
coordinator at the Natural Resource Governance Institute, said in an
interview with ICIJ.
“But although we’ve seen the indictment and
conviction of foreign companies and their top executives in Europe and
America,” Garuba said, “Nigeria’s own government has not taken action in
the very country in which the corruption took place.”
Source:http://www.thisdaylive.com/articles/leaked-files-link-abdulsalami-abubakar-chris-garba-to-182m-halliburton-bribery-scandal/201454/
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