Monday, December 22, 2025
ADVT 
India

Cognizant To Pay USD 25 Mn To Settle India Bribery Charges

The Canadian Press, 16 Feb, 2019 11:32 PM

    Major American IT player Cognizant will pay USD 25 million to the US Security and Exchange Commission to settle its India bribery charges, as Department of Justice filed criminal cases against two if its former top executives.


    The two former executives have been charged for their roles in facilitating the payment of millions of dollars in bribe to an Indian government official, the Security and Exchange Commission (SEC) said.


    Cognizant has agreed to pay USD 25 million to settle charges that it violated the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA), the SEC said.


    The complaint alleges that in 2014, a senior Tamil Nadu official demanded a USD 2 million bribe from the construction firm responsible for building Cognizant's 2.7 million square foot campus in Chennai.


    As alleged in the complaint, Cognizant's President Gordon Coburn and Chief Legal Officer Steven E Schwartz authorised the contractor to pay the bribe and directed their subordinates to conceal the bribe by doctoring the contractor's change orders.


    The SEC also alleges that Cognizant authorised the construction firm to make two additional bribes totalling more than USD 1.6 million.


    Cognizant allegedly used sham change order requests to conceal the payments it made to reimburse the firm, SEC said.


    The SEC charged Coburn and Schwartz with violating anti-bribery, books and records, and internal accounting controls provisions of the federal securities laws. The SEC is seeking permanent injunctions, monetary penalties, and officer-and-director bars against Coburn and Schwartz.


    In a separate statement, the Department of Justice said Gordon Coburn, 55, and Steven Schwartz, 51, have been charged in a 12-count indictment with one count of conspiracy to violate the FCPA, three counts of violating the FCPA, seven counts of falsifying books and records, and one count of circumventing and failing to implement internal accounting controls.


    The allegations in the indictment filed Thursday describe a sophisticated international bribery scheme authorised and concealed by C-suite executives of a publicly-traded multinational company, said Assistant Attorney General Brian Benczkowski.


    According to the indictment, in April 2014, Coburn and Schwartz allegedly authorised an unlawful payment of approximately USD 2 million to one or more foreign government officials in India to secure and obtain a necessary permit to open a new office campus.


    To conceal Cognizant's involvement in the scheme, Coburn, Schwartz and others allegedly agreed that a third-party construction company would obtain the permit by making the illegal bribe payment and that Cognizant would reimburse the construction company through phony construction invoices at the end of the project.


    The indictment further alleges that in June 2014, after the co-conspirators agreed that the construction company would make the bribe payment on behalf of Cognizant, the construction company secured the necessary government order for Cognizant to obtain the permit, allowing Cognizant to complete the development of the office campus and avoid millions of dollars in costs.


    Months later, the co-conspirators are alleged to have knowingly caused Cognizant to funnel over USD 2 million to the construction company disguised as payment for cost overruns on the office campus when they knew that the actual purpose of the payment was to reimburse the construction company for the bribe payment.


    According to the indictment, as Coburn, Schwartz and others had previously agreed, they hid the bribe reimbursement payment within a series of line items in a construction change order request to be paid to the construction company, thereby concealing the true nature and purpose of the reimbursement, falsifying Cognizant's books and records, and circumventing and failing to implement its internal controls.


    In a statement, Cognizant said it has resolved the previously disclosed investigations by the Department of Justice and SEC into whether payments relating to permits and licenses for certain real estate facilities in India violated the US FCPA.


    "We are pleased to reach these resolutions with the US Department of Justice and the US Securities and Exchange Commission. With today's announcements, we've taken a major step forward in putting this behind us," said Francisco D'Souza, vice chairman and CEO of Cognizant.


    D'Souza said Cognizant undertook a comprehensive internal investigation under the oversight of the Audit Committee of the Board of Directors, with the assistance of outside counsel.


    "We have also made further enhancements to our compliance processes, procedures and resources. It is important to note that this entire matter did not involve our work with clients or affect our ability to provide the quality services our clients expect from us," he said in a statement.


    The Company, it said, settled with the SEC by consenting to the entry of an administrative order. In total, the resolutions require it to pay approximately USD 28 million to the DOJ and SEC.


    "This amount is consistent with the accrual previously recorded by the company," the statement added.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Police Must Get Out Of Mindset Of Depicting Spas As Brothels: Madras High Court

    Police Must Get Out Of Mindset Of Depicting Spas As Brothels: Madras High Court
    Justice Anand Venkatesh allowed a batch of petitions and criminal original pleas from various spa and massage centres seeking quashing of FIRs and release of girls (who are therapists) lodged in government homes.

    Police Must Get Out Of Mindset Of Depicting Spas As Brothels: Madras High Court

    Consensual Sex Between Live-In Partners Not Rape, Says Indian Supreme Court

    Consensual Sex Between Live-In Partners Not Rape, Says Indian Supreme Court
    Supreme court said this while quashing an case lodged by a Maharashtra-based nurse against a doctor, who were in a live-in relationship "for quite some time".

    Consensual Sex Between Live-In Partners Not Rape, Says Indian Supreme Court

    1,605 Killed In Communal Violence Between 2004-2017, Says RTI Reply

    1,605 Killed In Communal Violence Between 2004-2017, Says RTI Reply
    The maximum number of incidents took place in 2008 when 943 cases were reported. The year witnessed most lives--167--lost to violence and 2,354 people were injured, said the year-wise data.

    1,605 Killed In Communal Violence Between 2004-2017, Says RTI Reply

    Mumbai Businessman Loses Rs. 1.86 Crore To SIM Swap Fraud

    Mumbai Businessman Loses Rs. 1.86 Crore To SIM Swap Fraud
    The police suspect the accused persons got access to the businessman's unique SIM number and initiated a SIM swap and then moved his money to other bank accounts through multiple transactions, he said.  

    Mumbai Businessman Loses Rs. 1.86 Crore To SIM Swap Fraud

    India To Get Info On Account Holders In Swiss Banks From 2019: Centre

    India To Get Info On Account Holders In Swiss Banks From 2019: Centre
    Minister of State for External Affairs VK Singh, replying to a question in the Lok Sabha, said such information may include details about persons allegedly involved in corruption.  

    India To Get Info On Account Holders In Swiss Banks From 2019: Centre

    Not VIPs, Woman And Her Mother Inaugurate Aerobridges At Guwahati Airport

    The number of aerobridges at the Lokopriya Gopinath Bordoloi International Airport in Guwahati is now six.  

    Not VIPs, Woman And Her Mother Inaugurate Aerobridges At Guwahati Airport