Exclusive: Trafigura refuses to hand over emails in Brazil bribery case

Reuters  |  SAO PAULO 

By Brad Brooks

Brazilian federal prosecutors on Friday demanded in a court filing that the Switzerland-based firm preserve the emails. They may contain evidence that other top executives at Trafigura were aware of millions of dollars in bribes paid to executives for sweetheart contracts, the prosecutors say.

Trafigura declined to comment, pointing to a prior statement about the case in which it said it takes the accusations seriously.

The case is part of Brazil's "Car Wash" probe that has revealed stunning political graft at Petrobras, brought down presidents and politicians, and sent scores of to jail.

Now, prosecutors are aiming for their biggest targets yet - multinational firms who have done business with in the past two decades. Brazilian prosecutors allege corruption took place on U.S. soil and was laundered through American and European banks, which could greatly widen the probe.

Aside from Trafigura, other like [VITOLV.UL], and are also under investigation.

Vitol has said it is cooperating with Brazilian authorities. A Glencore said the firm takes ethics and compliance seriously, and that it is cooperating with the investigation. Mercuria has denied wrongdoing.

has suspended and fuel trading with Vitol, Glencore and Trafigura.

Trafigura's Brazilian attorneys filed documents before the federal court saying the firm was likely prohibited by the European Union's (GDPR) from handing over the emails of former executives and Both men have been charged for bribing Petrobras officials, which they have denied.

According to a court document, sent a Dec. 31 letter sent to its Brazilian subsidiary Trafigura do Brasil, in which it wrote that it had been advised by that it would have to carry out an extensive examination of its responsibilities under the GDPR in several jurisdictions and also examine what individual country laws state about data privacy.

Trafigura questioned the Brazilian judge's demand that the emails be handed over, writing that "it remains unclear whether the request in respect of is indeed within the scope of the decision made by the judicial authority."

It argued in its court filing that it could potentially face a fine of 4 percent of its global revenues - well over $5 billion - if it is found in breach of the EU data laws.

Brazilian federal prosecutors declined to comment beyond the Friday court filing demanding the email archives not be destroyed.

Prosecutors have accused the European multinationals and some smaller players of collectively paying at least $31 million in bribes over a six-year period to employees at Petrobras, to sell them oil at favourable prices.

They have repeatedly said the firms' top brass had "total and unequivocal" knowledge that they were fleecing Petrobras and that the illicit activity may still be going on.

More than 600 pages of legal documents reviewed by portray what prosecutors describe as a bustling criminal enterprise fuelled by competition and greed.

Authorities say the trading companies often used freelance middlemen to cover their tracks, allowing them to negotiate deals and pay off Petrobras collaborators using in several countries.

Earlier this week, the overseeing the investigations against the commodity traders disclosed that one such alleged middleman had been arrested in on the request of the Brazilian

(Reporting by Brad Brooks, editing by and Rosalba O'Brien)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, January 12 2019. 03:19 IST