The United States Attorney's Office
Central District of California
United States Attorney's Office
Central District of California
Thom Mrozek
Public Affairs Officer
(213) 894-6947
thom.mrozek@usdoj.gov
January 17, 2008
FILM
EXECUTIVE AND SPOUSE INDICTED FOR PAYING BRIBES TO A
THAI TOURISM OFFICIAL TO OBTAIN LUCRATIVE FILM FESTIVAL MANAGEMENT CONTRACTS
Assistant Attorney
General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Thomas
P. O'Brien for the Central District of California announced that a Los
Angeles-area film executive and his spouse were indicted late yesterday
on allegations of making corrupt payments to a Thai government official
in order to obtain lucrative contracts to run an international film festival
held annually in Bangkok, in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices
Act (FCPA).
Gerald Green, 75,
and his wife Patricia Green, 52, both of West Hollywood, co-owners of
Film Festival Management, Inc. (FFM), a Los Angeles-based film company,
were indicted by a federal grand jury in Los Angeles on one count of conspiracy
to bribe a foreign public official in violation of the FCPA and six substantive
counts of violating the FCPA.
The charges stem
from a conspiracy to make more than $900,000 in bribe payments for the
benefit of a government official who headed the Tourism Authority of Thailand
(TAT) to obtain contracts to manage and operate the annual Bangkok International
Film Festival (BKKIFF) from 2002-2007.
According to the
indictment, the Greens owned and operated Film Festival Management, which
was formed in 2002 specifically to obtain the contracts to operate and
manage the BKKIFF. As charged, from 2002 and continuing into 2007, the
Greens conspired with others to bribe a senior Thai government official
who was, at the time, the president of the BKKIFF and the governor of
the TAT. As a result of her position at the TAT, the governor was able
to influence the awarding of the BKKIFF contracts. More than $900,000
in payments are alleged to have been made for the benefit of the governor
in exchange for payments totaling more than $7,000,000 under the BKKIFF
contracts. The indictment charges that the Greens used different business
entities, some with dummy business addresses and telephone numbers, in
their dealings with the TAT in order to hide the large amount of money
the Greens were being paid under the contracts. The indictment further
charges that the Greens disguised the bribes as "sales commission"
payments and made the payments for the benefit of the governor through
the foreign bank accounts of intermediaries, including bank accounts in
the name of the governor's daughter.
The Greens were charged
by criminal complaint on December 7, 2007, and they were arrested on December
17.
The conspiracy and
FCPA allegations each carry a maximum penalty of five years in prison.
The criminal case
is being prosecuted by Trial Attorney Jonathan E. Lopez of the Fraud Section
and Assistant U.S. Attorney Bruce Searby of the Central District of California.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Los
Angeles Field Office.
An indictment is
merely an accusation and a defendant is presumed innocent until proven
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.
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