The Serious Fraud Office is expected to announce on Friday morning that it
will take the politically momentous
decision to seek to prosecute BAE over bribery allegations.
The UK arms giant failed on Thursday night to meet a deadline to settle the case
or face the courts. The company is accused of paying out millions of pounds to
win lucrative arms contracts from a number of countries including Tanzania, the
Czech Republic, Romania and South Africa.
After months of fruitless negotiation, BAE had been given a deadline by the SFO
to plead guilty in a negotiated plea deal that would conclude a six-year
investigation.
Neither side has officially revealed their hand in what appears to have been a
high-stakes battle between Britain's biggest arms firm and the agency entrusted
with eradicating foreign bribery. However,
Richard Alderman, the agency's director, has been widely reported as in a
determined mood, and ready to see the company in court. His
personal credibility and that of the SFO
are on the line.
SFO sources said discussions were continuing privately between SFO case
controllers and lawyers from Allen & Overy and Linklaters, who are representing
BAE. BAE sources insisted they "did not recognise
any deadline".
A capitulation by BAE this week would be a turnaround for the agency, whose
reputation was damaged three years ago when it was forced by Tony Blair's
government to halt its investigation into BAE's Saudi arms deals.
A decision to prosecute would not be the end of the story. Alderman would have
to gain the formal consent of Lady Scotland, the attorney general, to press
charges. This power is due to be abolished, but still exists. Her decision could
take weeks or longer, and history suggests
she may be lobbied by BAE or by members of the cabinet.
The last attorney general faced with the prospect of prosecuting BAE was Lord
Goldsmith. He helped to force a closedown of the SFO's Saudi investigation in
2006 after an effective lobbying operation by BAE.
His behaviour caused controversy about the
politicisation of the role of the government's supposedly independent chief law
officer.
After the Saudi investigation was squashed, the SFO was allowed to continue
investigating BAE's deals in four other countries: Tanzania, the Czech Republic,
South Africa, and Romania. BAE has denied all wrongdoing.
If criminal charges are brought, they are likely to involve at least the cases
in Tanzania and the Czech Republic, where sources say the most progress has been
made. BAE refused to comment on Thursday night.
The SFO began investigating BAE after the company's network of secret offshore
"slush funds" was disclosed by the Guardian in an award-winning series of
investigations by the newspaper.
The fraud agency's confidence that it could get results was increased last week
when, in a legal first, the bridge construction firm Mabey & Johnson agreed a
deal to plead guilty to corruption concerning foreign contracts. It paid more
than £6-million in penalities, replaced a number of directors and promised to
turn over a new leaf. The deal included reparations to Ghana and other countries
where it admitted bribes were paid to officials and politicians.
The Mabey deal was the first successful corruption prosecution of any size
brought by a British government agency since laws were passed more than seven
years ago, explicitly banning foreign bribery.
It was seen as a template that BAE could be prepared to follow, of confession
followed by relative leniency. But BAE until now has insisted it was prepared to
"allow the ongoing investigations to take their course".