11/14/2011 04:11:00 PM EST
Fast and Furious: Corruption in Brazil and Upcoming World Cup and Olympics

I recently saw the latest installment of the Fast and
Furious franchise, entitled "Fast Five". In this installment, Vin Diesel as
Dominic Toretto and Paul Walker as Brian O'Conner led a team which steals over
$100 million from a Brazilian crime boss. One of the storylines of the movie is
that this crime boss has corrupted the Rio police force through bribery. Of
course this movie is fiction but one of the legacies of the most recent former
Brazilian President, Luiz Inάcia Lula da Silva, is one of systemic corruption
at the highest levels of power in the country. Sometimes truth is stranger than
fiction indeed.
In a recent article in the Wall Street Journal (WSJ),
entitled "Brazil
Corruption Ills Expose Underside of Lula Legacy", Paulo Prada reported
on the corruption scandal which has engulfed the Cabinet of the current
President (and handpicked successor of Mr. da Silva), Dimla Rousseff.
Prada reported that since June of this year, the following Cabinet
Ministers have resigned amid the following allegations for the subsequent
reasons (a/k/a the Corruption and Resignation Box Score)
|
Month
|
Minister Involved
|
Reason for Resignation
|
|
June
|
Chief of Staff (OK - technically not a Ministry
|
Alleged to have used public office to reap millions
through a private consulting firm
|
|
July
|
Transportation Minister
|
Alleged to have exchanged commission for contracts
|
|
August
|
Agriculture Minister
|
Reports of widespread kickbacks throughout Ministry
|
|
September
|
Tourism Minister
|
Reports he used public funds for personal expenses
|
|
October
|
Sports Minister
|
Allegations of kickbacks from social programs
|
|
November
|
Labor Minister - no resignation as yet
|
Accusations that ministry officials were taking
kickbacks
|
So if the Labor Minister resigns sometime this month it
will be a stunning 6 for 6 over the past 6 months. What kind of odds do you
think any Las Vegas casino would have given for that Pick 6 in May? Indeed, do
you believe that any casino in Brazil would have even put such a Pick 6 on the
odds board? While noting that "Corruption is nothing new in Latin American
politics and certainly not in its biggest country", this type and pattern of
corruption would certainly appear to be breathtaking. Prada noted that the cost
to Brazil for bribery is estimated to be 2% of the country's economy or over
$48 billion.
What does all this mean for a US company doing business
in Brazil? A compliance practitioner would hope that any such company would at
least be cognizant of this amount of reported corruption. The Transparency
International 2010 Corruption Perceptions Index gives Brazil a rating of 3.7.
Although this score is only the "perception" of corruption, it is certainly not
the best of scores. On a more general note, the recently released Chadbourne
Compliance Quarterly Special Report, authored by Scott Peeler entitled "A
Study of Individual Liability under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act",
listed the region where the most Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA)
violations occurred as Mexico, Central and South America.
If there is an American company which is doing business
in Brazil and is not aware of such information and findings, then its
compliance program should be nimble and agile enough to recognize Brazil as a
country in which the risk of FCPA violations could well be high and that
management of such FCPA risk should be moved up a notch or two. The recognition
of such increased risk is precisely what a Risk Assessment is designed to flesh
out by looking at a variety of factors such as (1) Geography - where does your
Company do business; (2) Interaction with types and levels of Governments; (3)
Industrial Sector of Operations; (4) Involvement with Joint Ventures; (5)
Licenses and Permits in Operations; (6) Degree of Government Oversight; and (7)
Volume and Importance of Goods and Personnel Going Through Customs and
Immigration. If your company meets some or all of these criteria, you next need
to assess the robustness of your compliance program as it applies to and in
Brazil. You may also want to do some internal controls testing and internal
auditing to see if you have any issues with your Brazilian operations today.
After performing the Risk Assessment, my next suggestion
would be to read Matt Ellis' recent 4-part series on "Doing Business in
Brazil" on his blog FCPAméricas.
Matt has a ton of experience working in Brazil and he is fluent in Portuguese
and Spanish. Lastly, give Matt a call and put him on retainer, you will need
him.
As great as the business opportunities are in Brazil
today, they are getting ready to explode with the upcoming 2014 World Cup and
2016 Olympics. There will be many, many American companies which have not done
work in Brazil previously, who will be bidding on and/or doing work for these
events. All of this bidding and work will be directly or indirectly for the
Brazilian government so any company doing work on either of these two world
class events should assume the FCPA applies in each and every transaction.
Remember, the promise of a bribe equals actually paying a bribe under the FCPA.
The bottom line for any US company doing or considering doing business in
Brazil is that the reward may be great but the risks are equally great. But
with all things FCPA, it is a risk and that risk can be managed. Compliance
Departments are not, nor should they be, "The Land of No". They exist to help
companies manage the risk of FCPA compliance.
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Episode
23 of This Week in FCPA is up. Check Howard Sklar and myself as we
discuss the Lanny Breuer speech at the ACI National FCPA Conference, Olympus,
the Bribery Act and more.
================================================================================
Visit the FCPA Compliance
and Ethics Blog, hosted by
Thomas Fox, for more commentary on FCPA compliance, indemnities and other forms
of risk management for a worldwide energy practice, tax issues faced by
multi-national US companies, insurance coverage issues and protection of trade
secrets.
This publication contains general information
only and is based on the experiences and research of the author. The author is
not, by means of this publication, rendering business, legal advice, or other
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© Thomas R. Fox, 2011
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