Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

World

Brazil ruling party treasurer hit with new charges

-

Prosecutors charged the former treasurer of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff's party Monday with 24 new counts of money laundering in a corruption scandal involving state oil giant Petrobras and high-ranking politicians.

Joao Vaccari, who resigned as Workers' Party (PT) treasurer after being arrested on April 15, is accused of funneling bribes skimmed off the top of inflated Petrobras contracts to the PT's coffers.

Prosecutors say Petrobras executives colluded with construction companies over the course of a decade to massively overbill the oil giant and use part of the money to bribe politicians, including members of the PT and its allies.

Vaccari has been caught up in several strands of the investigation into the graft at Petrobras, which the company, the largest in Brazil, said last week had cost it $2.1 billion.

In their latest addition to his growing charge sheet, prosecutors accused him of colluding with former Petrobras services director Renato Duque and businessman Augusto Mendonca to launder 2.4 million reals ($830,000) in dirty money through phony contracts with a printing company.

The scheme ran from April 2010 to December 2013, but the trio continued their criminal activity into 2014, failing to realize an investigation was under way, prosecutors said.

They said the scheme also involved two parties allied with the PT, the Progressive Party and the PMDB, a large centrist party seen as essential for doing business in Brasilia.

Money laundering carries a sentence of three to 10 years in prison in Brazil, which could be increased in the case of Vaccari and his co-accused if they are convicted of conspiracy and on multiple counts, prosecutors said.

They calculated the three accused owe the state $2.5 million in stolen Petrobras funds plus damages for the 24 new counts of money laundering.

Vaccari was first charged with corruption and money laundering in the Petrobras case on March 16.

Prosecutors charged the former treasurer of Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff’s party Monday with 24 new counts of money laundering in a corruption scandal involving state oil giant Petrobras and high-ranking politicians.

Joao Vaccari, who resigned as Workers’ Party (PT) treasurer after being arrested on April 15, is accused of funneling bribes skimmed off the top of inflated Petrobras contracts to the PT’s coffers.

Prosecutors say Petrobras executives colluded with construction companies over the course of a decade to massively overbill the oil giant and use part of the money to bribe politicians, including members of the PT and its allies.

Vaccari has been caught up in several strands of the investigation into the graft at Petrobras, which the company, the largest in Brazil, said last week had cost it $2.1 billion.

In their latest addition to his growing charge sheet, prosecutors accused him of colluding with former Petrobras services director Renato Duque and businessman Augusto Mendonca to launder 2.4 million reals ($830,000) in dirty money through phony contracts with a printing company.

The scheme ran from April 2010 to December 2013, but the trio continued their criminal activity into 2014, failing to realize an investigation was under way, prosecutors said.

They said the scheme also involved two parties allied with the PT, the Progressive Party and the PMDB, a large centrist party seen as essential for doing business in Brasilia.

Money laundering carries a sentence of three to 10 years in prison in Brazil, which could be increased in the case of Vaccari and his co-accused if they are convicted of conspiracy and on multiple counts, prosecutors said.

They calculated the three accused owe the state $2.5 million in stolen Petrobras funds plus damages for the 24 new counts of money laundering.

Vaccari was first charged with corruption and money laundering in the Petrobras case on March 16.

AFP
Written By

With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

You may also like:

World

A girl washes clothes by hand at a camp for displaced Palestinians erected in a school run by the United Nations Relief and Works...

Business

Moody's maintained France's sovereign rating at "Aa2" with a stable outlook.

World

Displaced Palestinian children chat with an Egyptian soldier through the fence separating Egypt and Rafah in the southern Gaza Strip - Copyright AFP MOHAMMED...

Sports

The head of the International Olympic Committee Thomas Bach has backed the World Anti-Doping Agency.