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In a Swiss landmark case, the ex-Trafigura boss is convicted of bribery connected to Angola

05/02/2025

Switzerland's highest court has convicted the commodities trading giant Trafigura and one of its senior executives of bribery over payments made by the firm to gain access to Angola's lucrative oil market.

In a landmark case, the court sentenced the company's British former chief operating officer, Mike Wainwright, who has also competed as a racing driver, to 32 months in jail and fined the company $148m (£119m).

This is the first time Switzerland's highest court has charged an entire company, and bribery convictions of senior staff are rare.

Trafigura's lawyers said the company and Wainwright intended to appeal against the verdict, so the former executive was not jailed immediately.

The case against Trafigura has had all the elements of a financial thriller: millions of dollars, shady intermediaries and a chain of shell companies located in offshore havens like the Virgin Islands.

The court heard that Trafigura's strategy was to set up a complex payment web, through which an official with Angola's state oil company was paid almost $5m (£4.02m; €4.81) between 2009 and 2011.

Documents presented to the court by Swiss prosecutors showed payments authorised on Trafigura's own headed notepaper.

The strategy appeared to work: the court heard over the next few years; Angola signed contracts with Trafigura worth almost $144m (£115.93; €138.56).

Trafigura, whose lawyers appeared bullish before the verdict, denied bribery. The company said its compliance and anti-corruption measures had been independently assessed and found to be excellent.

However, the sheer weight of the evidence—which included dozens of documents, emails, and memos—revealed a different picture: strict anti-corruption measures on paper and an intricate structure set up to evade those measures in reality. At the heart of it sat a middleman named "Mr Non-Compliant" in an anonymous Geneva office.

The case will chill commodity brokers worldwide, but especially in Geneva, where Trafigura and many other commodity trading houses are headquartered.

In an eerie coincidence, the night before the verdict was delivered, a fire broke out at the five-star Hotel des Bergues—where, court documents showed, an Angolan official stayed at Trafigura's expense in 2008.

Swiss federal prosecutors hope the case will symbolise the end of old business ways.

They brought the charges to Switzerland's highest court, reserved for the worst crimes, such as terrorist offences.

Trafigura now faces a large fine, and Wainwright, who was in court for the verdict and denied the charges, was told he must serve at least one year of his 32-month sentence in jail.

However, he was not immediately detained, pending the appeal he intends to lodge.

Source

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c2d3z87yn51o.amp

CORRUPTION

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