by Jason Leopold
17 December 2010
from
Truth-Out Website
Dick Cheney recently
faced bribery charges related to $180 million in bribes
that executives working for
Halliburton's former subsidiary, Kellogg, Brown & Root
paid to Nigerian government
officials between 1994 and 2004.
(Image: Lance Page / t r u t
h o u t; Adapted: Kristin Fitzsimmons / Wikimedia)
Former President
George
H.W. Bush and ex-Secretary of State James Baker were
part of a negotiating team that convinced Nigerian government officials to
drop bribery charges against Dick Cheney and Halliburton, the oil services
firm he led prior to becoming vice president.
Bush and Baker, whose law firm was
hired by Halliburton in 2004 to handle
the bribery allegations, participated in conference call discussions with
senior Nigerian government officials, including the country's attorney
general, Mohammed Adoke, last weekend on behalf of Cheney in an
attempt to work out a settlement, according to
a report published by an
African news agency.
The negotiations took place in London and included Halliburton
representatives.
On Friday, Femi Babafemi, a spokesman for Nigeria's Economic and
Financial Crimes Commission (EFCC), the agency that filed the 16-count
indictment last week, said the case against Cheney, Halliburton and several
other current and former executives has been "formally dropped."
Earlier this week, Babafemi said Halliburton agreed during negotiation talks
to a "plea bargain" and to "pay $250 million in fines in lieu of
prosecution." He said the Nigerian government accepted the terms of the
settlement.
Last week, after the indictment was filed in Abuja, Nigeria's capitol,
Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton
said,
"We do not believe that there will be a
basis for further action (requiring Cheney to respond to the charges),
but we will look into it."
Moreover, Johnnie Carson, the US Assistant
Secretary, Bureau of African Affairs,
told reporters during a conference
call last week that the US government was closely following the case against
Cheney and had already engaged in discussions about it with Nigerian
authorities.
As Truthout
previously reported, the charges revolve around $180 million in
bribes executives who worked for Halliburton's former subsidiary, Kellogg,
Brown & Root (KBR) paid to Nigerian government officials between 1994 and
2004 in exchange for $6 billion in construction contracts for the Bonny
Island natural gas liquefaction plant.
Nigeria is Africa's largest crude oil producer.
[Click here for a complete timeline.]
KBR, which also has handled lucrative US government support contracts for US
troops in Iraq and elsewhere, was spun off from Halliburton in 2007 into a
separate company. Nigerian officials had also charged KBR in the bribery
case.
The bribes allegedly went to the notoriously corrupt Nigerian dictator
Sani Abacha and some of his subordinates and were allegedly laundered
through UK lawyer Jeffrey Tesler, who served as a consultant to KBR
after it was formed in a 1998 merger that Cheney engineered between
Halliburton and Dresser Industries.
Tesler was hired in 1995 as an agent of a
four-company joint venture that was awarded four engineering, procurement
and construction (EPC) contracts by Nigeria LNG Ltd., (NLNG). Tesler was
indicted last year by the Department of Justice, which has been conducting
its own probe into the matter, and he is fighting extradition to the US.
Baker's alleged involvement in the settlement talks is not surprising given
that his law firm, Baker Botts, was hired by Halliburton in 2004 to conduct
an internal probe into the bribery scandal.
During the investigation, James Doty, a
partner at Baker Botts who led the probe, "discovered" notes written by
former KBR employees indicating the firm "may" have bribed Nigerian
government officials in exchange for lucrative contracts. Doty, served as
general counsel of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) under Bush
senior.
More recently, the SEC had questioned Cheney during its two-year-long probe
of Halliburton's accounting irregularities and concluded that he should not
be held responsible for what went on behind the scenes at the company he ran
between 1995 and 2000.
Truthout was unable to reach spokespeople for Bush and Baker. A Halliburton
spokesperson declined to comment.
The payment to the Nigerian government will bring an immediate end to the
bribery and corruption charges against Halliburton, Cheney and several of
the company's current and former executives.
Babafemi added that the payment consists of $120 million in penalties and
the repatriation of $130 million "trapped in Switzerland," and he expects
Adoke to approve of the deal as early as today.
Earlier this month, the Justice Department announced that Tesler's
associate, Wojciech J. Chodan, the former vice president to KBR's UK
subsidiary, pleaded guilty to violating the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA)
for in his role in the bribery scandal.
Chodan, who was extradited to the United States from England, is scheduled
to be sentenced in February and faces a maximum five years in federal
prison.
Albert "Jack" Stanley, who Cheney had named chief executive of KBR in 1998,
was also named in the indictment filed by Nigerian anti-corruption
officials. Charges against him have also been dropped.
Stanley was a close associate of Cheney's. The former vice president
promoted him in 1998 to head KBR and told the Middle East Economic Digest in
1999 that having Stanley at the helm of the Halliburton subsidiary "has
helped us tremendously."
In September 2008, Stanley
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire and
mail fraud to settle charges related to a separate kickback scheme and for
conspiring to violate FCPA in connection with bribery case.
According to the DOJ's plea agreement, Stanley started paying bribes in
1995, the year Cheney was named chief executive of the corporation, and
ended when Stanley was fired in 2004. Stanley faces seven years in prison
and nearly $11 million in restitution payments. He remains free on bail
pending a sentencing hearing scheduled for January.
Last year, KBR pleaded guilty to violating FCPA and admitted that it paid
$180 million in "consulting fees" to Tesler and a Japanese trading company
for use in bribing Nigerian government officials.
KBR paid a $402 million fine and Halliburton
paid $177 million in civil penalties as part of its plea deal, which was
handled by Baker's law firm.
Nigerians Condemn
Settlement
While Nigeria government officials may be satisfied with the settlement
agreement, the same cannot be said for some of the country's citizens and
activists who had hoped to see the former vice president respond to the
charges.
"I would have loved to see Dick Cheney in
chains in our court and facing justice in our prisons,"
said Celestine AkpoBari, program officer at Social Action Nigeria. "That would have
been a very big point that would have lifted Nigeria out of its woes."
In a statement, Emmanuel Ulayi, executive
director of the Civic Duties Awareness Initiative (CIDAI), an organization
that ensures,
"Nigerians adhere to their civic
responsibilities, condemned the decision."
Uliya said the settlement is evidence that
“the fight against corruption is dead and have never been real in
Nigeria." He said if the Nigerian government was serious about rooting
out corruption "it would not have reach this kind of understanding."
Owei Lakemfa, a columnist for Nigeria's Daily
Vanguard,
said Friday Cheney,
"is an international crook who should be in
jail in his country, Iraq, Netherlands, Afghanistan, Britain, Azerbaijan
or in Nigeria... But unfortunately, the scales of justice are not
balanced, so he will escape justice with his loot."