U.S. authorities fined cosmetics and drugs giant Johnson & Johnson $70 million on Friday for bribing doctors in Europe and paying kickbacks for contracts under a U.N. relief program in Iraq.
The Department of Justice and Securities and Exchange Commission said since 1998 the firm had paid doctors and hospital administrators in Greece, Poland and Romania for contracts and to promote its drugs and medical devices.
Johnson & Johnson also paid kickbacks between 2000-2003 for 19 contracts under the U.N. Oil for Food Program, which provided humanitarian supplies to Iraqis while the country, still ruled by Saddam Hussein.
The firm, the 15th largest U.S. company by market capitalization, agreed to pay U.S. authorities $70 million to settle the charges, including $48.6 million to the SEC and $21.4 million to the Justice Department.
US prosecutor Mythili Raman that the company had "cooperated extensively" with the investigation.
"The message ... is plain -- any competitive advantage gained through corruption is a mirage," said SEC enforcement director Robert Khuzami.
"J&J chose profit margins over compliance with the law by acquiring a private company for the purpose of paying bribes, and using sham contracts, offshore companies, and slush funds to cover its tracks."
The charges detailed that J&J subsidiaries Cilag AG International and Janssen Pharaceutica made $858,000 dollars in payoffs to Saddam Hussein's government to win $9.0 million in contracts under the deeply corrupted Oil for Food Program.
"The kickbacks were concealed from the United Nations by inflating Janssen and Cilag's contract prices by 10 percent," they said.
The SEC said J&J was under a related investigation by Britain's Serious Fraud Office and that a resolution was also expected.
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