http://www.eurasianet.org
BUSINESS & ECONOMICS  April 2, 2003
TOP OIL CONSULTANT INDICTED IN NEW YORK IN CASE WITH IMPLICATIONS FOR
KAZAKHSTAN
3/31/03

After an extensive grand jury investigation, prominent oil consultant
James Giffen was arraigned March 31 in New York on two counts of violating
the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). The case may have profound
implications for Kazakhstan. According to published reports, Giffen is
alleged to have funneled millions of dollars to bank accounts controlled
by top Kazakhstani government officials.

According to a source familiar with the case, authorities took Giffen into
custody at John F. Kennedy International Airport in New York on March 30.
Giffen, chairman of Mercator Corp., was arraigned at the US District Court
Southern District of New York, a court clerk told EurasiaNet. The two
counts against Giffen include conspiracy to violate the FCPA and an actual
violation of FCPA. US District Court Magistrate Judge Douglas F. Eaton set
bail at $10 million. Giffen's legal counsel has insisted his client is
innocent of any wrongdoing.

A federal complaint unsealed March 31 does not identify any of Giffen's
alleged co-conspirators by name, the informed source said. However, the US
government's case focuses on payments made by Mercator Corp. to a
foundation that is controlled by top Kazakhstani government officials.

Specifically, the complaint alleges that a $20.5 million payment was
transferred in 1997 to a Swiss bank account controlled by a company called
Orel Capital Limited. The complaint linked Orel to the Lichtenstein-based
Semrek Foundation, which bank records show as being under the direct
control of senior Kazakhstani government officials.

"Prosecutors must be very confident of the evidence because, dealing with
the corporate community, they must be very diligent," said Joseph
LaPalombara, a professor emeritus at Yale University who tracks
multinational corporate behavior in developing countries. "Typically what
prosecutors and investigators do is try to choose companies and alleged
misbehavior of which, if they are successful, they can make an example."

A federal grand jury in New York examined evidence in connection with the
Giffen case for over two years. [For background see the Eurasia Insight
archives].

A corruption scandal in Kazakhstan, dubbed Kazakhgate, has emerged as a
major source of political tension over the past year. Opposition leaders
have sought to publicize official misdeeds in order to undermine President
Nursultan Nazarbayev's administration. [For background see the Eurasia
Insight archives].

Authorities responded by cracking down on opposition activity, both in the
political sphere and in mass media. Perhaps the most notorious case in the
crackdown so far has involved journalist Sergei Duvanov, who was sentenced
to a 3 ½-year prison term on a rape charge that he maintains was
politically motivated. [For additional information see the Eurasia Insight
archive]. Duvanov has said the government jailed him in retribution for
writing articles that implicated Nazarbayev in taking illicit payments.


Reply via email to