Former
Alcatel Executive Pleads Guilty to Participation in Payment of $2.5
Million in Bribes to Senior
Costa Rican Officials to Obtain a Mobile Telephone Contract
WASHINGTON - A
former Alcatel CIT executive pleaded guilty to participating in the
payment of more than $2.5 million in bribes to senior Costa Rican government
officials in order to obtain a mobile telephone contract from Costa
Rica's state-owned telecommunications authority, in violation of the
Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), the Department of Justice announced
today.
Christian Sapsizian,
a French citizen, entered the plea earlier today in U.S. District Court
in Miami, before the Honorable Patricia Seitz. Sapsizian pleaded guilty
to two counts, conspiracy and violating the FCPA, from a superseding
indictment returned on March 20, 2007. The remaining counts will be
dismissed at the time of sentencing, scheduled for December 20, 2007.
As part of his plea, Sapsizian has agreed to cooperate with law enforcement
authorities in their ongoing investigation.
Until Nov., 30,
2006, Alcatel was a French telecommunications company whose American
Depositary Receipts (ADRs) were traded on the New York Stock Exchange.
Sapsizian was employed by Alcatel or one of its subsidiaries for more
than 20 years. At the time the corrupt payments were made, Sapsizian
was the company's deputy vice president responsible for Costa Rica.
Sapsizian admitted
that from February 2000 through September 2004, he conspired with co-defendant
Edgar Valverde Acosta, a Costa Rican citizen who was Alcatel's senior
country Officer in Costa Rica, and others to pay more than $2.5 million
in bribes to senior Costa Rican officials in order to obtain a mobile
telephone contract on behalf of Alcatel. The payments, funneled through
one of Alcatel's Costa Rican consulting firms, were made to a director
of Instituto Costarrisence de Electricidad (ICE), the state-owned telecommunications
authority in Costa Rica, which was responsible for awarding all telecommunications
contracts. Sapsizian further admitted that the ICE director was an advisor
to a senior government official and the payments were shared with the
senior government official.
According to Sapsizian,
the payments were intended to cause the ICE director and the senior
government official to exercise their influence to initiate a bid process
which favored Alcatel's technology and to vote to award Alcatel a mobile
telephone contract. Alcatel was in fact awarded a $149 million mobile
telephone contract in August 2001.
Sapsizian faces
a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison, a $250,000 fine, and $330,000
in forfeiture.
The case is being
prosecuted by Deputy Chief Mark F. Mendelsohn and Trial Attorneys Charles
Duross and Mary K. Dimke of the Criminal Division's Fraud Section. The
Criminal Division's Office of International Affairs provided substantial
assistance in gathering evidence abroad and facilitating international
cooperation. The matter continues to be investigated by the Federal
Bureau of Investigation. Significant assistance was provided by the
Southeast Regional Branch of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission,
the Office of the Attorney General in Costa Rica, and the Fiscalia de
Delitos Economicos, Corrupcion y Tributarios in Costa Rica.