RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) – Three executives of Brazil’s Camargo Correa group were convicted yesterday of money laundering, corruption and other charges, the first construction-industry executives to be sentenced in a giant price fixing and bribery scandal involving state-run oil company Petrobras.
Dalton dos Santos Avancini, chief executive officer of Camargo Correa Construcoes e Participacoes SA, Joao Ricardo Auler, the company’s chairman, and Eduardo Hermelino Leite, a senior executive, were all convicted of corruption and membership in a criminal organization. The ruling was handed down by Judge Sergio Moro of Brazil’s Federal Court in Curitiba.
Also, Avancini and Leite were each convicted of 38 counts of money laundering.
The convictions came the day Federal Police decided to formally accuse Marcelo Odebrecht, CEO of Odebrecht SA , of having a role in the scandal. The police accusations are expected to be followed by similar charges that prosecutors plan to present later this week to judge Moro asking him to indict the executive.
Odebrecht is among the major Brazilian construction and engineering companies that prosecutors accuse of fixing contracts to rob billions of dollars from Petroleo Brasileiro SA, as Petrobras is formally known. The money was then kicked back to Petrobras executives and politicians as bribes and campaign contributions, according to prosecutors.