According to the US Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), these violations were conducted by Walmart's third-party intermediaries who made payments to foreign government officials.
International
retail giant Walmart
Thursday agreed to pay over $282 to various US bodies to settle
charges of violating anti-corruption regulations while conducting its
business in India, China, Brazil and Mexico.
According
to the US Security and Exchange Commission (SEC), these violations
were conducted by Walmart's third-party intermediaries who made
payments to foreign government officials without reasonable
assurances that they complied with the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
or FCPA.
SEC
has charged Walmart with violating FCPA
by failing to operate a sufficient anti-corruption compliance
programme for more than a decade as the retailer experienced rapid
international growth.
Walmart
agreed to pay more than $144 million to settle the SEC's charges and
approximately $138 million to resolve parallel criminal charges by
the Department of Justice for a combined total of more than $282
million, SEC said.
"Walmart
valued international growth and cost-cutting over compliance,"
said Charles Cain, Chief of the SEC Enforcement Division's FCPA Unit.
"The
company could have avoided many of these problems, but instead
Walmart repeatedly failed to take red flags seriously and delayed the
implementation of appropriate internal accounting controls," he
said.
Walmart
consented to the SEC's order finding that it violated the books and
records and internal accounting controls provisions of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934.
According
to the SEC's order, Walmart failed to sufficiently investigate or
mitigate certain anti-corruption risks and allowed subsidiaries in
Brazil, China, India, and Mexico to employ third-party intermediaries
who made payments to foreign government officials without reasonable
assurances that they complied with the FCPA.
Business Standard
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