Friday, December 6, 2024

McKinsey & Company Africa to Pay Over $122M in Connection with Bribery of South African Government Officials

 

McKinsey and Company Africa (Pty) Ltd (McKinsey Africa), which operates in South Africa as a wholly owned and controlled subsidiary of international consulting firm McKinsey & Company Inc. (McKinsey), will pay over $122 million to resolve an investigation by the Justice Department into a scheme to pay bribes to government officials in South Africa between 2012 and 2016. The guilty plea of a former McKinsey senior partner who participated in the bribery scheme was also unsealed. The Justice Department’s resolution is coordinated with prosecutorial authorities in South Africa.

McKinsey Africa entered into a three-year deferred prosecution agreement (DPA) with the department in connection with a criminal information filed in the Southern District of New York charging the company with one count of conspiracy to violate the anti-bribery provisions of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA). Vikas Sagar, a former senior partner of McKinsey who worked in McKinsey Africa’s South Africa office, previously pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to violate the FCPA.

According to court documents and admissions, McKinsey Africa, acting through a senior partner and for the benefit of McKinsey, agreed to pay bribes to then-officials at Transnet SOC Ltd. (Transnet), South Africa’s state-owned and state-controlled custodian of ports, rails, and pipelines, and at Eskom Holdings SOC Ltd. (Eskom), South Africa’s state-owned and state-controlled energy company. Between at least 2012 and 2016, McKinsey Africa obtained sensitive confidential and non-public information from Transnet and Eskom regarding the award of lucrative consulting contracts and submitted proposals for multimillion-dollar consulting engagements, while knowing that South African consulting firms with which McKinsey Africa had partnered would pay a portion of their fees as bribes to officials at Transnet and Eskom. As a result of the bribery scheme, McKinsey and McKinsey Africa earned profits of approximately $85,000,000.

“McKinsey Africa bribed South African officials in order to obtain lucrative consulting business that generated tens of millions of dollars in profits,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division. “As a consequence, McKinsey Africa has agreed to pay a criminal penalty of more than $122 million. The resolution announced today — the department’s third coordinated resolution with South African authorities in only two years — is evidence that our International Corporate Anti-Bribery (ICAB) initiative, which we announced in November 2023, is bearing fruit. Through the ICAB, the Criminal Division remains committed to strengthening its international partnerships, including in South Africa, to combat corruption.”

“McKinsey Africa participated in a yearslong scheme to bribe government officials in South Africa and unlawfully obtained a series of highly lucrative consulting engagements that netted McKinsey Africa and its parent entity McKinsey & Company approximately $85 million in profits,” said U.S. Attorney Damian Williams for the Southern District of New York. “The scheme was carried out by a senior partner at McKinsey and allowed McKinsey Africa to repeatedly get awarded consulting contracts through corruption and bribes at two different state-owned entities in South Africa. This office and our law enforcement partners will continue our fight against American companies that seek to gain an unfair business advantage by supporting corrupt political officials overseas, no matter the industry, no matter the country, and no matter how prominent or profitable those companies may be.”

“This settlement underscores our unwavering commitment to holding companies accountable that willfully engage in corrupt activities around the world,” said Assistant Director Chad Yarbrough of the FBI Criminal Investigative Division. “McKinsey Africa engaged in a serious and long-running bribery scheme to secure contracts by corrupting government officials. This misconduct is a blatant violation of law and a breach of public trust. No matter what country the crime occurs in, the FBI will always work closely with our international partners to root out corruption.”

“McKinsey Africa will pay over $122 million, a clear indication that corruption comes at a significant cost,” said Inspector in Charge Eric Shen of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service (USPIS) Criminal Investigations Group. “The resolution of this case underscores that justice has no borders, and those who engage in bribery and conspire to commit crimes will be held accountable. The Postal Inspection Service is committed to ensuring that government resources and international partnerships serve the public good and are never exploited for personal or corporate gain.”

Pursuant to the DPA, McKinsey Africa has agreed to pay a criminal penalty of $122,850,000. The Justice Department has agreed to credit up to one-half of the criminal penalty against amounts McKinsey pays to authorities in South Africa in related proceedings. In addition, both McKinsey and McKinsey Africa have agreed to, among other things, continue cooperating with the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York in any ongoing or future criminal investigation arising during the term of the DPA. McKinsey and McKinsey Africa have also agreed to enhance their compliance program where necessary and appropriate and to report to the government regarding remediation and implementation of their enhanced compliance program.

The Justice Department reached this resolution with McKinsey Africa based on a number of factors, including, among others, the nature and seriousness of the offense. McKinsey Africa received credit for its cooperation with the department’s investigation, which included (i) immediately and proactively cooperating from the inception of the department’s investigation; (ii) making numerous factual presentations to the department over the course of its investigation, derived from information obtained through the company’s internal investigation; (iii) collecting, reviewing, and producing voluminous records, including those located abroad, in response to requests from the department; (iv) promptly reporting the discovery of document-deletion efforts by the McKinsey partner involved in the conduct found during its internal investigation, taking additional investigative steps to uncover information and evidence regarding those efforts, and producing such information and evidence to the department; (v) reporting, in real time, newly discovered information and documents that allowed the department to preserve and obtain evidence as part of its independent investigation; (vi) tracing complex internal accounting money-flows and currency exchange-information in response to requests from the department; (vii) preserving, collecting, and producing to the department documents located abroad, and engaging a third-party forensics consultant to analyze key electronic devices and providing to the department the results of that analysis; (viii) collecting and producing to the department personal email and bank account information of the McKinsey partner involved in the conduct relevant to the department’s investigation; (ix) engaging with the department in response to a deconfliction request to preserve the integrity of the department’s investigation; and (x) making company officers and employees available for interviews.

McKinsey and McKinsey Africa also engaged in timely remedial measures, including: (i) putting the McKinsey partner involved in the criminal scheme on leave when it learned of the partner’s role in the scheme, subsequently separating that partner from McKinsey after discovering his deletion activity, and requiring that partner’s continued cooperation post-separation; (ii) conducting additional anti-corruption training for employees in South Africa and elsewhere in Africa, and ceasing work with all state-owned enterprises (SOEs) for a period of time while it conducted its internal investigation; (iii) enhancing due diligence processes for third-party partners, including instituting controls to ensure that due diligence is completed before work begins on an engagement and imposing a more rigorous risk-review for public sector clients; (iv) carrying out an enhanced review process for all sole-source work that requires advance-approval before the engagement can begin; and (v) voluntarily repaying, in 2018 and 2021, all revenues that McKinsey and McKinsey Africa received from potentially tainted contracts to the SOEs in South Africa from which they received contracts as a result of the criminal scheme.

In light of these considerations as well as McKinsey’s prior history, the criminal penalty calculated under the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines reflects a 35% reduction off the fifth percentile of the otherwise applicable guidelines fine range.

FBI’s Los Angeles International Corruption squad and USPIS are investigating the case.

Trial Attorneys William E. Schurmann and Alexandra P. Swain of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Andrew K. Chan and Nicholas Chiuchiolo for the Southern District of New York are prosecuting the case.

The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs and authorities in South Africa provided assistance in this matter.

The Criminal Division’s Fraud Section is responsible for investigating and prosecuting FCPA and Foreign Extortion Prevention Act matters. Additional information about the Justice Department’s FCPA enforcement efforts can be found at www.justice.gov/criminal/fraud/fcpa.

Attorney General James Announces Convictions and Sentences of Five Taxi Company Owners in Orange and Rensselaer Counties for Stealing Millions from Medicaid

 

Hudson Valley and Capital Region Taxi Companies and Their Owners Plead Guilty to Illegally Overcharging Medicaid Millions in Fees for Transportation Services

New York Attorney General Letitia James announced that five individuals and their seven transportation companies have pleaded guilty to stealing more than $4.4 million from New York’s Medicaid program through fake billing and illegal kickbacks, as well as engaging in money laundering and other fraudulent schemes to conceal their crimes. Muhammad Rizwan Khan, 38, Muhammad Usman Khan, 40, and Farhan Khan, 29, all of Orange County, and their related companies pleaded guilty on December 4 in Orange County Court for stealing over $3.8 million from Medicaid. As a result, Muhammad Rizwan Khan and Farhan Khan will be sentenced to two and one-third to seven years and one to three years in state prison, respectively. Muhammad Usman Khan will be sentenced to six months in jail concurrent with five years of probation. The Khans will also pay $2 million to Medicaid in restitution for their crimes.

In a separate case, John Gouzos, 48, of Nassau County, and Richard Sehl, 57, of Saratoga County, and their companies all pleaded guilty on November 26 in Rensselaer County Court for stealing over $650,000 from Medicaid. John Gouzos will be sentenced to six months in jail concurrent with five years of probation. Richard Sehl will be sentenced to a five-year term of probation.

“Exploiting vulnerable New York patients to steal millions of taxpayer dollars is illegal and reprehensible,” said Attorney General James. “Funds that should have been used to provide health care and services to New Yorkers in need were instead diverted because of fraudulent schemes. Not only did these individuals steal from Medicaid, they undermined the businesses of honest transportation providers, putting crucial patient services at risk. My office will continue to root out fraud and abuse in our health care system.”

Medicaid reimburses authorized businesses for transporting Medicaid patients to and from covered medical services. Both sets of defendants operated schemes in which they illegally overcharged Medicaid for transportation services. Between September 2019 and October 2023, the Khans and their companies submitted claims for fictitious trips and added fake tolls to trips that were far above any real toll that could be incurred in the service area, regularly adding costs of up to $50 per trip. In total, they overcharged Medicaid over $3.8 million. Gouzos and Sehl also submitted claims to Medicaid for fictitious trips with fabricated mileage to inflate their Medicaid claims between December 2021 and March 2023.

A key part of both operations were illegal kickback schemes involving Medicaid patients that allowed the companies to recruit patients who they could then use to fraudulently bill more expensive trips to Medicaid. The Khans and their companies made weekly kickback payments to Medicaid recipients, who gave them the identification numbers needed to submit false claims. Gouzos and Sehl similarly paid illegal kickbacks to Medicaid patients to request rides from locations much farther away from where they were actually transported, allowing them to charge more per ride.

In addition, both sets of defendants engaged in money laundering using shell companies they operated. These money laundering schemes allowed them to obtain their fraudulent Medicaid payments in cash and distribute kickbacks to Medicaid recipients they had recruited. 

Muhammad Rizwan Khan, Farhan Khan, and their companies Tristate Express NY, Inc. (Tristate), Meditrans NY, Inc. (Meditrans), and Empire Trans NY, Inc. (Empire) pleaded guilty to Grand Larceny in the First Degree, a class B felony. Muhammad Usman Khan pleaded guilty to Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, a class D felony, and corporate defendant A1 Class Car, Inc. (A1 Class) pleaded guilty to Money Laundering in the Second Degree, a class C felony.

Gouzos, the owner and president of Medi Cab Corp. (Medi Cab), pleaded guilty to Health Care Fraud in the Third Degree, a class D felony, and is scheduled to be sentenced on January 27, 2025 to six months in jail concurrent with five years of probation. Gouzos has already repaid over $200,000 in restitution to Medicaid. Sehl, who was a manager of Medi Cab, is also scheduled to be sentenced on January 27 to a five-year term of probation for a conviction of Offering a False Instrument for Filing in the First Degree, a class E felony. Corporate defendant Medi Cab entered a guilty plea to Grand Larceny in the Second Degree, a class B felony, and the remaining companies, Jay Auto Care, Inc. (Jay Auto Care), and Hojo Detail Center, Inc. (Hojo), both entered pleas to Money Laundering in the Fourth Degree, a class E felony. 

As a result of their convictions, each defendant will also be barred from being a provider in all government-funded health programs, including Medicaid and Medicare.

The Attorney General thanks the following government and private sector partners for their assistance and cooperation in these investigations: the United States Department of Health and Human Services – Office of the Inspector General, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the New York State Department of Health, the Office of the Medicaid Inspector General, Medical Answering Services, the New York State Police, Orange County Sheriff's Office, and the Town of Crawford Police Department.

The criminal cases were handled by Special Assistant Attorneys General Samantha McCullagh and Patrick Scully with assistance from Regional Director Todd Pettigrew, MFCU Chief of Criminal Investigations Thomas O’Hanlon, and Deputy Chief of MFCU’s Civil Enforcement Division Konrad Payne. Alee Scott is MFCU’s Chief of the Civil Enforcement Division. MFCU is led by Director Amy Held and Assistant Deputy Attorney General Paul J. Mahoney. The Division of Criminal Justice is led by Chief Deputy Attorney General José Maldonado under the oversight of First Deputy Attorney General Jennifer Levy.

Reporting Medicaid Provider Fraud: MFCU defends the public by addressing Medicaid provider fraud and protecting nursing home residents from abuse and neglect. If an individual believes they have information about Medicaid provider fraud or about an incident of abuse or neglect of a nursing home resident, they can file a confidential complaint online or call the MFCU hotline at (800) 771-7755. If the situation is an emergency, please call 911.

New York MFCU’s total funding for federal fiscal year (FY) 2025 is $70,502,916. Of that total, 75 percent, or $52,877,188, is awarded under a grant from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The remaining 25 percent, totaling $17,625,728 for FY 2025, is funded by New York State.

MAYOR ADAMS RELEASES NEW ANALYSIS SHOWING - POST-COVID RECOVERY OF HOLIDAY SPENDING, JOB CREATION, FOOT TRAFFIC AS “AFFORDABILITY WEEK” ROLLS ON

 

Average of Over 3 Million People Visited City Shopping Districts Every Day During 2023 Holiday Season, With Over 4 Million Daily Visits on Weekend Before Christmas 

  

Retail Sector Has Added Average of 14,000 Jobs Each Holiday Season, Generating Over $500 Million Per Year in Economic Impact 

  

Outside of Manhattan, Outer Borough Hubs in Downtown Flushing and Downtown Brooklyn Attract Large Crowds During Holiday Season 


New York City Mayor Eric Adams released a new report, “Festive Spending: the Impact of the Holiday Season on NYC Retail,” showing holiday season shopping in New York City has fully recovered following the COVID-19 pandemic, attracting up to 4.4 million daily visitors, creating 14,000 jobs, and pouring over $500 million into New York City’s local economy. This injection of money into local businesses comes as Mayor Adams celebrates “Affordability Week,” where he is advancing a series of generational projects that will make New York City more affordable for working-class people. The New York City Economic Development Corporation (NYCEDC) report — analyzing daily visitation on Black Friday and December weekends from 2019 to 2023 — traced foot traffic across traditional Manhattan tourism and retail hubs like Times Square and Fifth Avenue, as well as neighborhoods across the boroughs like Downtown Flushing in Queens and MetroTech in Brooklyn. As the Adams administration and New York City has broken multiple records for total jobs in the city’s history, and a recent analysis from the New York City Department of City Planning (DCP) shows a robust recovery of the retail sector, the holiday season is poised to bring a significant boost to New York City’s economy and continue to put money in New Yorkers’ pockets, making the city more affordable for working-class people. 

  

“New York City isn’t just coming back — we’re back, and we’re better than ever,” said Mayor Adams. “We’re hitting jobs record after jobs record, we’ve brought our economy back from its COVID lows to hit new highs, and we’re continuing to put money back into working-class New Yorkers’ pockets to make this city more affordable. No time is that more true than the holidays — and we can’t wait to welcome the millions of people from around the world who come to our shopping districts this time of year. They’re supporting thousands of jobs and businesses, and injecting half a billion dollars into our local economy. So, when you’re shopping this holiday season, remember — shop local, shop small, and most of all, spend money in New York City!” 

  

“This report offers data that supports what we see across the city every day — a robust economy, bustling business corridors, and a large and growing network of small businesses in every borough,” said First Deputy Mayor Maria Torres-Springer. “As we enter the holiday retail season, the city will see hundreds of millions of dollars of spending at businesses of all sizes and is poised to enter 2025 on an economic upswing that will benefit all New Yorkers.” 

  

“New York City has reached record highs this year in employment and labor force participation. This new report shows that our shopping districts have also had a strong comeback and will continue to thrive,” said NYCEDC President and CEO Andrew Kimball. “New York City’s holiday season is expected to return to its pre-COVID levels this year, bringing millions of visitors, thousands of jobs, and hundreds of millions of dollars to our communities, from Midtown Manhattan to Downtown Flushing and everywhere in between.” 

  

Key takeaways from the report include:  

  •   The holiday season is the busiest time of the year for New York City shopping districts. In 2023, daily visitation during Black Friday and December weekends averaged 3.2 million visitors, a 14 percent increase from the average daily visitation of the year. Daily visitation in these districts peaked at 4.4 million visitors — 2.8 times the population of Manhattan — on the weekend before Christmas. 
  •   Manhattan retail hubs like Fifth Avenue, Bryant Park, Times Square, and SoHo are the most popular destinations for holiday shopping, with foot traffic increasing significantly on Black Friday as well as on December weekends. In other boroughs, retail hubs like Downtown Flushing and the MetroTech area in Downtown Brooklyn also attract large crowds. Daily visits to Downtown Flushing, for example, exceed those to SoHo. 
  •   The holiday season is also a key driver of jobs for the retail sector. Since 2020, the retail sector has added an average of 14,000 jobs each holiday season, generating over $500 million per year in economic impact. 
  •   The Midtown hubs — Times Square, Bryant Park, and Fifth Avenue — are top attractions for tourists, especially during the holidays. In 2023, 70 percent of visitors to these areas during the holiday season came from outside of the city, 9 percentage points higher than an average weekend. 
  •   Increased visitation leads to higher consumer spending near the end of the year. In New York City, spending during December weekends in 2023 was 20 percent higher than non-holiday weekends that year. 

  

This report on holiday retail boosts follows positive news last month from DCP that storefront vacancy rates have declined for four consecutive quarters. By comparison, a survey of 24 corridors across the city during the summer of 2020 showed inactivity rates of over 30 percent.  

  

The Adams administration has continued to support businesses, invest in public realm improvements, and cut red tape across the five boroughs, resulting in this commercial revitalization. In June, the New York City Council passed Mayor Adams’ “City of Yes for Economic Opportunity” zoning amendment, which will help businesses find space and grow, support entrepreneurs and freelancers, boost growing industries, and enable more vibrant streetscapes and commercial corridors. Through the New York City Department of Small Business Services, the Adams administration has also connected small businesses to over $290 million in grants and loans and more than $35 million in commercial revitalization for Business Improvement Districts. As a result, New York City now has a record number of small businesses in operation, and one in five small businesses open today opened during the Adams administration. 

  

In October, Mayor Adams and the Future of Fifth Partnership unveiled their plans to transform Fifth Avenue, between Bryant Park and Central Park, into a world-class, pedestrian-centered boulevard, bolstering the iconic corridor’s status as an economic engine and job creator for New York City. The proposed design expands sidewalks by 46 percent, shortens crosswalks making for safer crossings, reduces the number of traffic lanes from five to three, and adds plantings and lighting for aesthetics and safety. 

  

NYCEDC used a variety of primary and secondary data sources to study the economic impact of the holiday season. The visitation and foot traffic data are from Placer.ai. The spending trends are based on the Mastercard consumer spending index. Employment figures come from the New York State Department of Labor Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages. The economic impact is estimated using holiday retail employment and the RIMS II multipliers for New York City from the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis. 

  

STATE ASSEMBLYWOMAN JENIFER RAJKUMAR INTRODUCES LEGISLATIVE PACKAGE OF BILLS BRINGING SOUND FISCAL POLICY TO ALBANY

 

GAME-CHANGING BILLS REVOLUTIONIZE BUDGET PROCESS TO DELIVER FISCAL DISCIPLINE, TRANSPARENCY, AND ACCOUNTABILITY FOR TAXPAYER DOLLARS

Assemblywoman Jenifer Rajkumar unveiled her comprehensive fiscal reform package that will change the face of budgeting in New York and ensure responsible management of hundreds of billions of taxpayer dollars. Her bills instill fiscal discipline, ensure balanced budgets, provide unprecedented transparency, and guarantee sound State spending.

Assemblywoman Rajkumar said, “New Yorkers work hard and play by the rules, and they expect their state government to do the same. These groundbreaking reforms will require best bookkeeping practices, transparent budgeting, and responsible spending. They will shine a light on every penny of spending, so New Yorkers know exactly where their money is going. These bills provide a full arsenal of solutions to instill fiscal responsibility and smart budgeting, allowing New York to spend wisely and navigate any financial crisis.”

Assemblywomen Rajkumar’s extensive list of budgetary reforms includes:

Rainy Day Act

So that New York can always pay its bills, Assemblywoman Rajkumar introduced the Rainy Day Act (A10594). This bill will let New York State increase deposits in the Rainy Day Reserve Fund from 25% of spending to 30%, providing ample reserves to plug any future budget deficits. As of now, New York State ranks 45th in reserves as a percentage of operating budget, and the Assemblywoman’s bill will save the State from painful decisions during an economic downturn. The Rainy Day Act also mandates deposits into the reserve fund, and repeals other slush funds used to stabilize the budget.

Better Balanced Budgets

Assemblywoman Rajkumar introduced the Better Balanced Budget Act to hold New York accountable for balancing the budget. Among the bill’s diverse array of tools are quarterly analyses to confirm the State will meet its obligations; a prohibition on accounting gimmicks to hide deficits; and guidelines to show which appropriations correspond to which items of spending.

The Assemblywoman also introduced a Constitutional amendment (A10633) to lock in responsible budgeting for future generations. The amendment requires the State Legislature to pass balanced budgets—a requirement that currently only applies to the Governor’s proposed budget—and sets Constitutional limits on borrowing.

Appropriate Appropriations Act

To bring even more fiscal discipline to Albany, Assemblywoman Rajkumar introduced the Appropriate Appropriations Act (A10632) to eliminate certain appropriations that have little oversight or transparency.  These include lump sum appropriations whose use is not specified in the budget; reappropriating a previous year’s unused appropriation; use of one-time emergency funds for ongoing programs; and “dry appropriations,” where a budget bill grants spending authority without allocating funds for the expenditure. The Act also requires a public database of all grants made by the State.

The Appropriate Appropriations Act puts an end to some irresponsible budget practices. Budget bills frequently carry over agencies’ unused spending authority from one year to the next, resulting in almost a trillion dollars in spending authority for a $237 billion budget. Dry appropriations can create massive unfunded mandates. The Act requires a source of revenue for each expenditure, ending the current practice of budget bills not even identifying whether appropriations have funding allocated for them.

Return on Investment Act

Assemblywoman Rajkumar also introduced the Return on Investment Act (A10612), for the first time providing full accountability of economic development programs. These grants, tax abatements, and other incentives cost New Yorkers over $10 billion a year, yet the benefits are unclear. Some projects have failed to meet expectations: the State granted $13 million to an electronics plant that promised to employ 290 people, only for it to employ 22 people and close in four years. Assemblywoman Rajkumar’s ROI Act will provide comprehensive analyses of all economic development programs to make sure these billions in subsidies are providing a good return for taxpayers.

Mandatory Fiscal Notes for Bills

The final bill in Assemblywoman Rajkumar’s package will require fiscal notes for any Albany bills with budgetary implications. Currently, the legislature passes bills requiring millions in new spending, yet bear a note simply stating, “Fiscal Implications: To be determined.” Some speciously say there is no cost. Assemblywoman Rajkumar’s bill will require actually calculating the fiscal implications, ensuring that her Albany colleagues and all New Yorkers know the price tag of every bill before it goes to a vote.