"I am the Way, the Truth, and the Life"

Father God, thank you for the love of the truth you have given me. Please bless me with the wisdom, knowledge and discernment needed to always present the truth in an attitude of grace and love. Use this blog and Northwoods Ministries for your glory. Help us all to read and to study Your Word without preconceived notions, but rather, let scripture interpret scripture in the presence of the Holy Spirit. All praise to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

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Showing posts with label construction. Show all posts
Showing posts with label construction. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

Corruption is Everywhere > Ukrainians who suffer from Russian bombings, are abused by rampant Ukrainian corruption

 

Ukraine is one of the most corrupt countries in the world. The good news is that they have some degree of freedom of the press, and the EU is pressing the government to clean up its act. Is that even possible?


Ukrainian journalists tackle corruption, calling out misuse of resources


FOCUS © FRANCE 24

The European Union has agreed to start accession talks with Ukraine next year. But further progress will depend on the country meeting tough conditions, particularly in the fight against corruption. Many of those conditions are actually defined not by Brussels, but by Ukrainian civil society activists, who ask the EU to demand the reforms that they themselves deem necessary. The country has a vibrant and determined community of anti-corruption activists and journalists, who after holding off for the first few months of Russia's full-scale invasion, have lately redoubled their vigilance. Our correspondent Gulliver Cragg reports.



Wednesday, April 17, 2019

Corruption is Everywhere - Certainly in Peruvian Presidential Politics - Suicide

Ex Peruvian president dies after shooting himself in the head moments before arrest

FILE PHOTO Former Peruvian president Alan Garcia © REUTERS/Guadalupe Pardo

Former Peruvian President Alan Garcia has died after shooting himself in the head as police arrived at his home to arrest him. The ex-president was rushed to hospital, but doctors could not save him.

As police officers knocked on his door on Wednesday morning, Garcia shut himself in his room and shot himself in the head. The former leader was rushed to hospital, reportedly suffered multiple cardiac arrests during surgery, and died several hours later.

Peruvian president Martin Vizcarra confirmed Garcia's passing, sending his condolences to the late leader's family and loved ones.


The former leader sought asylum in Uruguay last November, after a judge barred him from leaving Peru for 18 months. The asylum request was denied, and a judge in Lima ordered his detention on Tuesday.

Prosecutors say Garcia took bribes from Odebrecht in exchange for a lucrative public transport contract in Lima. Garcia denied the charge, and claimed he was being politically persecuted.

IMHO - people don't shoot themselves for being wrongfully accused; they fight to clear their name and reveal the truth.

Peru's Last 5 Presidents implicated

Peru’s last five ex-presidents have all served jail time or are under investigation for corruption. Garcia’s successor, Pedro Pablo Kuczynski, is also being investigated for his alleged involvement in the Odebrecht scandal. Prosecutors are currently seeking to extend Kuczynski’s detention until he can be brought to trial.



Tuesday, April 16, 2019

Corruption is Everywhere - But in Canadian Politics? Collingwood

Ex-Liberal MP made $1M on Ontario town deals
while sister was mayor, inquiry reveals

Dave Seglins · CBC News 

Former Liberal MP Paul Bonwick's consulting work for companies doing business in Collingwood, Ont., is under scrutiny.
He was awarded for the work while his sister, Sandra Cooper, was mayor of the resort town, northwest of Toronto.
(Metroland and Dave Seglins/CBC)

Former Ontario Liberal MP, the Hon. Paul Bonwick, earned more than $1 million in consultant's fees on a series of backroom deals involving public money while his sister was a local mayor, a judicial inquiry has revealed.

Public hearings got underway Monday in the ski and summer vacation town of Collingwood, Ont., northwest of Toronto, with inquiry lawyers making public key emails and documents from 440,000 pages of evidence they've gathered.

Town council called the probe after Ontario Provincial Police began investigating the multimillion-dollar sell-off of part of Collingwood's power utility and allegations of improper influence and kickbacks involving the proceeds.

Bonwick told CBC News Monday that he and his company, Compenso Communications, performed "a broad range of consulting services" to earn the money and flatly denies any collusion with his sister, town officials or utility insiders to gain an unfair advantage.

"Absolutely not," Boniwck said in an email, saying he never improperly obtained insider information. "No. Nothing deemed confidential or that wasn't accessible by other parties if requested," Bonwick wrote.

Public hearings got underway Monday into town deals in Collingwood, Ont., that netted
former Liberal MP Paul Bonwick about $1 million in consulting fees. (Dave Seglins/CBC)

The current mayor, Brian Saunderson, elected last fall says he pushed for this inquiry while sitting on the previous council.

"I think the public deserves to know what happened," Saunderson said at the outset of the hearings. "The things that happened here in Collingwood are really not unique. They are things that could happen in any small community."

No one has been charged. The OPP investigation continues.

The public inquiry is to hold hearings through June and deliver its findings in the fall.

Insiders paid bonuses 

Bonwick, MP for Simcoe-Grey from 1997 until 2004, is one of the key subjects of the inquiry over his roles as both a consultant — and as brother to former mayor Sandra Cooper.

Bonwick was a paid consultant for PowerStream, which in 2012 bought a 50-per-cent stake in Collingwood's power utility, Collus, despite the town receiving a much higher bid from another potential buyer.

Former MP Paul Bonwick received consulting fees for the sell-off of Collingwood's public power utility, as well as projects
to build membrane structures atop the town's rink and the Collingwood Centennial Aquatic Centre, seen in this photo.
(Dave Seglins/CBC)

The public was never told — and the then-mayor never disclosed — that her brother was involved in the multimillion-dollar sell-off.

Inquiry records released last week revealed for the first time that a number of utility insiders were paid bonuses, and that Bonwick — who worked closely with them and his sister in the mayor's office to help PowerStream clinch the deal — made $323,000 in fees.

The records also suggest PowerStream had insider information and special access to Collingwood council during the bidding.

"It paints a picture which is yet to be proven of a very flawed process that ended up in a deal that brought a subpar return for our taxpayers and will continue to haunt taxpayers for years to come," Mayor Saunderson said.

$756K in fees from construction deal

The public inquiry will also examine what Collingwood officials did with the millions in proceeds from the sale, including $12.4 million the town spent on a sole-sourced contract to build dome structures over a town pool and skating rink.

CBC News last summer revealed that Bonwick secretly made an additional $756,000 fee as a consultant for BLT Construction, helping the firm land the deal with the town in record time with little public scrutiny.

OPP investigators allege Bonwick's role was "shrouded in various layers of secrecy and is evidence of fraudulent activity — to which the Town of Collingwood is the victim," according to a 2014 search warrant.

In the court document, the OPP also accused Bonwick of working closely with the town's then-chief administrative officer Ed Houghton who police suspected of breach of trust for his role.

While the OPP investigation continues, none of those allegations has ever been tested in court and police have charged no one.


Bonwick says the public doesn't have all the facts.

"I remain hopeful that as the inquiry gets underway, and the subsequent recommendations that will be provided by Justice (Frank) Marrocco, a much more clear understanding of the events leading up to the sale of the utility will be made available to the public," Bonwick told CBC News.

Bonwick is attending the inquiry representing himself. He was denied funding for a lawyer in an ongoing dispute with the municipality. Town officials won't offer financial assistance, claiming Bonwick has failed to disclose details about his personal finances to justify support.

Bonwick's sister, ex-mayor Sandra Cooper, is being called to testify at the inquiry.

She has declined numerous opportunities to comment and has hung up on CBC News when asked over the telephone about her brother's role in town deals under her watch.

Houghton, the former town CAO, who also served as president of the utility at the time of the sell-off, has denied any wrongdoing in responses to questions from CBC News.

Collingwood has already changed its own conflict of interest policies to prohibit elected officials from making decisions on deals when a sibling is involved, something not currently prohibited by provincial legislation.

Mayor Saunderson says other small- and medium-sized municipalities across Canada can learn from the Collingwood inquiry, as local governments take on more responsibilities, and face less scrutiny in an age of shrinking media.

"We're increasingly at risk. In the last five years we have seen the closure of the Enterprise Bulletin, which was a newspaper that had been in town for 150 years. Our local TV station is less active. Our fifth estate is not there to shine a light on things."

Inquiry lead counsel Kate McGrann says hearings will continue until mid-June, with the presiding judge to deliver findings and recommendations later this year.

"We're looking to be able to explain to everyone what happened. The people of the town of Collingwood would like to understand what happened when the town sold half of its shares in the public utility." McGrann said in an interview, noting the inquiry will follow the money trail of all involved.

"The inquiry is here to do very specific things. Investigate. Report. And make recommendations."



Thursday, March 21, 2019

Brazilian Ex-President Temer Arrested in Anti- Corruption Probe

Corruption is Everywhere
Definitely in Brazilian Politics


Brazil’s former president Michel Temer has been arrested as part of a sweeping anti-corruption probe, media reports say. Temer took the office in 2016 after the impeachment of Dilma Rousseff – also on allegations of corruption.

Temer was detained at his house in Sao Paulo on Thursday morning and then transferred to federal police headquarters in Rio de Janeiro by the police task force, Brazilian news portal Globo reports. 

An arrest warrant has also allegedly been issued against the former energy minister Moreira Franco as well as Eliseu Padilha, who served as a civil aeronautics minister under ex-president Rousseff and later worked as a minister of labor and the chief of staff of the presidency under Temer, according to Globo.

The arrest is related to charges over alleged graft involving the construction of the Angra 3 nuclear plant, Reuters reported, citing the Brazilian Federal Prosecutor’s Office.

Meanwhile, Brazilian media reports that the ex-president faces investigation on ten separate cases. At least some of inquiries into his affairs are part of the ongoing large-scale criminal investigation known as Operation Car Wash in Brazil.

Initially launched as a money laundering probe, it was expanded to cover allegations of corruption at the state-controlled oil company Petrobras. Former presidents Luiz Lula da Silva and Dilma Rousseff were also indicted under it.

The ex-president’s lawyer confirmed his arrest. Temer came to power following Rousseff’s impeachment back in 2018 and stayed in office until December 31, 2018.

Brazil’s former leader was accused of corruption during his presidency in 2017 but the charges were blocked by the lower house of the Brazilian parliament at that time. Temer himself repeatedly denied any wrongdoing.



Friday, February 1, 2019

Corruption is Everywhere - Certainly in Quebec Construction

Former SNC-Lavalin CEO pleads guilty
in superhospital fraud case
CBC News 

Former SNC-Lavalin CEO Pierre Duhaime leaves a Montreal courtroom on Friday, after pleaded guilty to a charge of helping a public servant commit breach of trust for his role in the MUHC superhospital bribe scandal. (Paul Chiasson/Canadian Press)

Former SNC-Lavalin CEO Pierre Duhaime pleaded guilty to helping a public servant commit breach of trust in a Montreal courtroom Friday morning, six years after he was first arrested in a major fraud case related to a new hospital complex.

According to the Crown, Duhaime, 64, admitted to turning a blind eye to bribes made by his company in order to rig the bidding process so SNC-Lavalin would win the contract to build the new McGill University Hospital Centre (MUHC) superhospital in Montreal.

That contract was worth $1.3 billion.

"Instead of acting upon that knowledge, and stopping this from happening, which he could have done, he chose to look the other way," said prosecutor Robert Rouleau.


Quebec's anti-corruption squad arrested Duhaime in November 2012 on 15 charges, including fraud, conspiracy and forgery. Fourteen of those charges were withdrawn Friday.

​Duhaime's trial was supposed to begin next Monday.

He was alleged to have paid a total of $22.5 million in bribes to secure the MUHC contract. Of that money, $10 million went to Yanaï Elbaz, the former director of redevelopment for the MUHC.

Provincial court Judge Dominique Joly accepted a joint recommendation from the defence and Crown that Duhaime be sentenced to 20 months of house arrest, 240 hours of community service, and make a $200,000 donation to a fund that compensates victims of crime.

The wealthy have their own judicial system. House arrest!!!? Mind you, SNC Lavalin has been involved in corruption accusations all over the world as bribery is a way of life in construction, not just in Quebec but, most likely, in nearly every country. If a company is going to compete internationally, they have to play the game.

4th to plead guilty
Duhaime is the fourth person to plead guilty to charges in connection with the hospital contract, which one Quebec police investigator has called "the biggest case of corruption fraud in Canadian history."

Last November, Elbaz was sentenced to 39 months in prison after pleading guilty to charges including breach of trust and conspiracy.

Riadh Ben Aissa, SNC-Lavalin's former vice-president of construction, was sentenced to 51 months in prison in July. He pleaded guilty to one charge of using a forged document.

Pamela Porter, the wife of Arthur Porter, the former chief executive of MUHC who died in Panama in 2015, was jailed for money laundering in 2014. 

Duhaime hasn't been CEO of the engineering company since 2012, when he stepped down after an internal audit found he signed off on "improper payments" to undisclosed agents.


Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Ecuador's Vice President to be Tried on Bribery Charges

Corruption is Everywhere - Especially in South America

By Ed Adamczyk 

UPI -- Vice President of Ecuador Jorge Glas will face trial on bribery charges, the country's National Court of Justice ruled.

Of course, Brazil is involved

Glas is the highest-ranking politician indicted thus far in a widespread scandal involving Odebrecht, a Brazilian construction company. The U.S. Department of Justice revealed in December that Odebrecht paid $788 million in bribes across 12 Latin American and African countries for preferential treatment in obtaining infrastructure construction projects. Over $33.5 million in bribes were paid in Ecuador, former Odebrecht executive Jose Conceicao Santos admitted in a plea deal. Prosecutors accuse Glas of talking $13.5 million, or about one-third of the money paid in Ecuador. Glas denies the charges.

As part of a plea deal, Jose Conceicao Santos, a former Odebrecht executive in Ecuador, admitted that the company had paid $33.5 million in bribes since 2007 to secure infrastructure contracts in the country.

Glas was arrested on Oct. 2, and has been in custody without bail since that date. He will be tried for illicit association and faces up to five years in prison if convicted.

Twelve others allegedly involved in the corruption scandal are also in custody in Ecuador. Politicians in Mexico, Peru, Panama and Brazil have been identified as involved in the corruption scandal.

With charges mounting against him, President Lenin Moreno relieved Glas of his government duties in August.

Glas has said he is a victim of political and media persecution. In a letter from jail to his children, released to the public immediately after the decision to try him, he wrote, "Your father is imprisoned because he was direct and for always standing up. Your father never flees. Someday you will understand all this. The example of my actions is the best legacy I can give you. Always remember that you never have to resign yourself to threats, hatred, and injustice."



Monday, February 6, 2017

Peru's Ex-President Toledo Denies Taking $20M in Bribes

Corruption in 3rd world countries is rampant, and arguably, not a lot better in developed countries. 
Cleaning up corruption, at least somewhat, is necessary if 3rd world countries are ever going to
emerge into the developed world.

Former Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo allegedly took $20 million in bribes from the Brazilian conglomerate Odebrecht. He denied the accusations following a raid conducted by Peru's Public Ministry on Saturday. Photo courtesy of Alejandro Toledo
By Andrew V. Pestano  

Feb. 6 (UPI) -- Former Peruvian President Alejandro Toledo denied taking bribes as part of the Odebrecht corruption scandal after prosecutors searched his home.

Investigators raided Toledo's home in Camacho on Saturday as part of a Peruvian government effort to probe the extent Odebrecht's confessed bribery scheme influenced Peru's officials and businesses.

"Special prosecutor's team continues to work for more than five hours in raiding Alejandro Toledo's house in Camacho," Peru's Public Ministry said in a statement. "The documentation found in the house of ex-President Toledo will be evaluated by the Public Ministry."

Jorge Barata, Odebrecht's former executive director who is cooperating with authorities, accused Toledo of receiving $20 million in bribes from Odebrecht for a contract to build a highway between Brazil and Peru.

Politicians in several countries are accused of accepting bribes -- either personal bribes or bribes distributed to their political party -- in exchange for lucrative government contracts for Odebrecht and Braskem, another Brazilian firm.

Toledo dismissed the accusations as an unfair political attack against him.

"I express my deep concern about the politicization over the information of the cases handled by the Public Ministry," Toledo said in a statement. "I will appear before the court every time it is mentioned again, although I do not have supporters, comrades or ex-lawyers in the fiscal and judicial function."

Odebrecht in December agreed to pay at least $2.6 billion in criminal penalties over its role in the massive corruption scandal.