SINGAPORE: Authorities are conducting a joint investigation into offences potentially committed by Seatrium, formerly Sembcorp Marine, relating to a massive and long-running corruption case in Brazil, dubbed Operation Car Wash.
The Monetary Authority of Singapore and the Singapore police’s Commercial Affairs Department have requested further information from the company for the purpose of the investigations, Seatrium said in a filing with the Singapore Exchange on June 15.
The offences were potentially committed by the company and/or its officers when it was Sembcorp Marine, before its renaming in 2023 after the merger with Keppel Offshore & Marine.
They fall under the Securities and Futures Act 2001, the Corruption, Drug Trafficking and Other Serious Crimes (Confiscation of Benefits) Act 1992, and all previous versions of those laws.
Seatrium said it continues to provide its full cooperation to the Singapore authorities.
The company will continue to monitor the situation and make appropriate announcements in the event of any material developments.
In the meantime, shareholders and potential investors were advised to exercise caution when dealing in its shares.
Seatrium shares closed down 1.77% at S$1.67 on June 14.
The company announced in March that Singapore’s Attorney-General’s Chambers (AGC) was agreeable to entering a deferred prosecution agreement with Seatrium following the alleged corruption offences in Brazil.
Seatrium was given a US$110mil fine in connection with the alleged corruption offences in Brazil dating back some 15 years.
But of this, the AGC is agreeable to crediting up to US$53mil of the payments to the Brazilian authorities against the penalty.
As such, Seatrium would only have to pay the remaining US$57mil or S$76.5mil.
In a subsequent response to queries from the Singapore Exchange on April 1, Seatrium said the agreement is not definitive yet and is subject to AGC’s agreement and the approval of Singapore’s High Court.
Additionally, two former executives of the group were charged with corruption offences on March 28 for allegedly paying bribes of more than S$20mil to further the company’s business interests in Brazil.
The offshore and marine energy engineering company in February posted a S$1.68bil net loss for the second half of its 2023 financial year, a more than tenfold increase from the S$118.3mil loss for financial year 2022. — The Straits Times/ANN