identifying foreign officials under the fcpa: interpreting

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Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting Varying DOJ/SEC and Court Guidance Sharpening Compliance Through Understanding Who Is and Who Is Not a Foreign Official Today’s faculty features: 1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific The audio portion of the conference may be accessed via the telephone or by using your computer's speakers. Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information. If you have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926 ext. 10. TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2013 Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A James G. Tillen, Member, Miller Chevalier, Washington, D.C. Matteson Ellis, Special Counsel, Miller & Chevalier, Washington, D.C. Mark Gough, Deputy Head for Compliance Investigations, Siemens, Munich, Germany

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Page 1: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

Identifying Foreign Officials Under

the FCPA: Interpreting Varying

DOJ/SEC and Court Guidance Sharpening Compliance Through Understanding Who Is and Who Is Not a Foreign Official

Today’s faculty features:

1pm Eastern | 12pm Central | 11am Mountain | 10am Pacific

The audio portion of the conference may be accessed via the telephone or by using your computer's

speakers. Please refer to the instructions emailed to registrants for additional information. If you

have any questions, please contact Customer Service at 1-800-926-7926 ext. 10.

TUESDAY, AUGUST 20, 2013

Presenting a live 90-minute webinar with interactive Q&A

James G. Tillen, Member, Miller Chevalier, Washington, D.C.

Matteson Ellis, Special Counsel, Miller & Chevalier, Washington, D.C.

Mark Gough, Deputy Head for Compliance Investigations, Siemens, Munich, Germany

Page 2: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Page 3: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Page 4: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Page 5: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

Identifying Foreign Officials Under

the FCPA

Strafford Publications

August 20, 2013

James G. Tillen

[email protected]

Matteson Ellis

[email protected]

Miller & Chevalier Chartered

Mark Gough

[email protected]

Deputy Head, Compliance Investigations

Siemens

Page 6: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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FCPA Anti-Bribery Provisions: Elements of a Violation

• No issuer, domestic concern, person with a U.S. nexus

• May corruptly

• Take any action in furtherance of payment or a promise,

offer, or authorization of payment

• Of a bribe or anything of value

• Directly or indirectly (with “knowledge”)

• To a foreign official

• To obtain or retain business or improper advantage

Page 7: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Foreign Official: Who is a “Foreign Official”?

• FCPA defines a “foreign official” as any officer or employee of:

a foreign government;

any department, agency or “instrumentality” thereof;

a public international organization (e.g., World Bank); and

any person acting in an official capacity for or on behalf of any of the above (could include intermediaries)

• FCPA also prohibits payments to foreign political parties or officials thereof and candidates for foreign political office

Page 8: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Foreign Official: As Applied

• In FCPA practice, the agencies found the following roles to fit the “foreign official” definition : Employee of any agency or instrumentality (e.g., employee of

tobacco monopoly, customs official)

Judge or legislator

Employee of public university or research institute

Private person acting officially

Official of a public international organization (e.g., the World Bank)

Tribal leader or member of Royal Family

Candidates for public office, elected officials, political parties, and party officials

Appointed official

Relative or dependent of an official

Employee of state-owned or partially state-owned enterprise

Page 9: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Foreign Official: “Instrumentality”

• FCPA does not define “instrumentality,” but agencies claim

it extends to SOEs and quasi-governmental entities

• Until recently, insight into term’s interpretation limited to

OECD Anti-Bribery Convention, negotiated settlements,

DOJ Opinion Releases, and comments of U.S. officials

• Critics allege that FCPA did not intend for all commercial

SOEs to be deemed “instrumentalities”

Page 10: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Foreign Official: “Instrumentality” Pre-Guidance Cases and Dispositions

• Recent court cases have focused on the issue of when

state-owned or state-controlled companies and qualify

as “instrumentalities”: Haiti Teleco, Carson, Lindsey,

and O’Shea

• In rulings on this issue, U.S. district courts have tended

to leave the determination to the jury and uphold jury

instructions with multi-factor tests

Page 11: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Who Is a “Foreign Official” – New Developments

• Appellate Review:

Esquenazi & Rodriguez (Haiti Teleco) appeal to the 11th Circuit

» Include a challenge to the District Court’s jury instruction on the term

“instrumentality”

» Defendants have argued that “instrumentality” status determined by

government function served by entity (or lack thereof), not degree of

state ownership

» First time a circuit court has the opportunity to clarify “foreign official”

definition

» Oral Arguments scheduled for October 11, 2013

• DOJ Opinion Procedure Release on whether a member of

a royal family is a “foreign official”

Page 12: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

12

Release of FCPA Guidance

• On Nov. 14, 2012, DOJ and SEC jointly issued 120-page

“Resource Guide on the U.S. FCPA” (FCPA Guide)

• Overall, FCPA Guide does not fundamentally change key

enforcement positions, but expressly clarifies current

agency practices, while confirming and consolidating

public guidance and some “lore” in detail

• FCPA Guide is "non-binding, informal, and summary”

"does not constitute rules or regulations."

would have little legal authority if cited in court

• However, agency representatives have stated publicly

that statements in Guide may reasonably be relied on and

cited when negotiating with the agencies, which intend to

abide by the Guide’s terms

Page 13: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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FCPA Guide on “Instrumentality”

• FCPA Guide endorses recent court rulings defining “instrumentality,”

incorporating list of non-exclusive factors:

State’s extent of ownership

State’s degree of control

State’s characterization of entity and its employees

Circumstances of entity’s creation

Purpose of entity’s activities

Entity’s obligations and privileges under foreign law

Power vested in entity to administer its functions

Level of financial support by foreign state

Entity’s provision of services to jurisdiction’s residents

Whether entity’s purpose is expressed in policies of foreign government

Perception that entity is performing official or governmental functions

• State-owned or controlled entities can be instrumentalities, but no

bright-line rule—fact-specific inquiry to be left to jury

Page 14: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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FCPA Guide on “Instrumentality” (Cont.)

• FCPA Guide states that "as a practical matter” entities

unlikely to qualify as instrumentalities if government does

not own or control a majority of shares."

Only a presumption. Guide cites Alcatel-Lucent as one exception

where “instrumentality” status was found even though there was no

majority ownership

• Thus majority ownership/control alone not sufficient for

status as “instrumentality”—one of several key factors

• Similarly, majority control/ownership also theoretically not

required for status as “instrumentality”

Page 15: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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FCPA Guide on “Instrumentality” (cont.)

• Alcatel-Lucent (2010)

• Countries: Malaysia, Costa Rica, Honduras, Taiwan

• In Malaysia, enforcement officials viewed bribes to employees

of Telekom Malaysia as “foreign officials”

Malaysian Ministry of Finance owns 43% of Telekom

Malaysia

Ministry of Finance has veto power over all major

expenditures

Minister of Finance has status of a "special shareholder"

Some Telekom Malaysia officers are political appointees

Page 16: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Is Issue Moot?

• UK Bribery Act and many local laws prohibit

commercial bribery

• Travel Act and other U.S. laws used to reach

commercial bribery

• Administrative ease of not distinguishing between

officials and non-officials

Page 17: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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The Varied Nature of SOEs: Are they arms of the state?

• Examples from Mexico:

Power utilities (ABB – CFE): Providing a public

function?

Public hospitals (Orthofix – IMSS and hospitals):

Provision of services to residents?

National oil companies (Siemens – Pemex):

Financial support by state?

Page 18: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Example of Government Control: “Power to Appoint”

U.S. v. Esquenazi

Upon appeal, DOJ argues that one of factors

establishing that the company Teleco was an

instrumentality of Haiti was that:

“Haiti’s president and high-level ministers controlled

Teleco through their appointment of Teleco’s board of

directors and general director.”

Page 19: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Example of Government Control: “Power to Appoint”

• Examples of government influence / political

interference:

Board appointees selected for political reasons, not

commercial ones

Unqualified lower-level hires

Unfavorable suppliers and third parties

Misguided investment decisions

• Effects of government influence

Page 20: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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The Varied Nature of SOEs: Are they private actors in the marketplace?

• Impacted by commercial factors and decision-

making based on commercial considerations.

• SOEs seeking public and private sector financing

• SOEs can violate the FCPA (Statoil)

• SOEs conducting internal investigations (Saudi

Aramco and Tyco’s FCPA settlement).

• SOEs inquiring about anti-corruption compliance

• SOEs as victims (Venezuela’s BANDES, Costa

Rican electricity utility, Mexico’s PEMEX)

Page 21: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Common Corruption Risks with SOEs

• Procurement Risks (high dollar contract awards)

Foreign officials require bidders to hire “consultants”

Companies hire foreign officials (doctors) to perform

services (trainings)

Companies rely on “experts” for bid preparation who

formerly worked at SOE

Specifications narrowly designed to benefit bribe-

paying company

SOEs create complicated technical requirements to

establish discretion in decision-making

Page 22: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Common Corruption Risks with SOEs

• Procurement Risks (high dollar contract awards),

cont.

Companies gain access to confidential information,

like tender specifications before they are released or

competitor’s bid

Procurement officials fully vet one bid to disqualify it

and give a less rigorous review to a higher-priced bid

Companies entertain procurement officials before

procurement is announced and specifications defined

Page 23: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Common Corruption Risks with SOEs

• Gifts and Hospitality

In some countries and industries, it is common to give

gifts and to provide hospitality to clients, including

foreign officials.

At what point does a gift or hospitality become a

bribe?

In addition to other factors, the activity should comply

with local law.

Example, Mexico (gift limits of $48)

Page 24: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Common Corruption Risks with SOEs

• Charitable Contributions

Companies might wish to support non-profit and

community endeavors.

Companies must be careful to ensure that donations

to charities are not disguised as illegal payments to

foreign officials.

Companies must ensure that owners of the recipient

charity are not foreign officials (SOE officials?) or

relatives of foreign officials.

Page 25: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Local Law Differs

• “Public Official” includes:

Argentina: Employees of state-owned or state-

controlled companies so long as they are performing

public functions.

Brazil: Any person who discharges an office,

employment or function in a state-owned enterprise or

who works for a legal entity created by government to

undertake commercial or business activities on behalf of

the government.

Chile: Employees of state-owned companies which may

be dependent upon the state.

Page 26: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Local Law Differs

• “Public Official” includes:

Colombia: Companies with public investment under 90%

are private and their employees are not public officials.

Ecuador: If state-owned enterprise carries out a public-

function, then employees are considered public officials.

Mexico: A person employed by or holding an office or

commission in a majority federal state-owned enterprise,

or persons handling federal funds.

Venezuela: Directors and administrators of civil and

commercial companies established with public resources

or with a certain amount of government involvement

Page 27: Identifying Foreign Officials Under the FCPA: Interpreting

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Consequences for Compliance Programs

• Identifying government customers, suppliers, and

business partners

• Training of employees

• Identifying which third parties are interacting with

officials of company and require safeguards

• Identifying which hospitality expenditures deserve

additional scrutiny