Brazilian
prosecutors charged 35 businessmen in connection with the Petrobras corruption
case on Thursday, the first wave of indictments arising from the investigation
into the scandal surrounding the state-owned oil giant.
The 35 are
accused of being complicit in a scheme which saw dozens of politicians, mostly
allies of the government, receive hundreds of millions of dollars in sweeteners
from over-charged contracts involving Brazil's biggest company.
The group
are the first people to be charged in the scandal, which broke following the
arrest nine months ago of Paulo Roberto Costa, formerly a Petrobras director of
supplies.
Costa blew
the whistle as part of a plea bargain.
The
prosecutors' office added further prosecutions were likely to follow after charging
former Petrobras officials along with a slew of figures from leading
construction and engineering firms who allegedly paid out bribes in return for
winning fat contracts.
"The
is the start of the investigation, we have a long way still to go," said
prosecutor Rodrigo Janot.
"These
people stole Brazilians' pride," said Janot, who warned the case was
complex while promising a "calm, balanced, but firm and thorough
investigation."
Those
accused face charges of corruption, money laundering and helping to set up a
criminal organization.
Executives
charged included ranking officials from constructors such as OAS, Camargo
Correa, UTC, Mendes Junior, Engevix and Galvao Engenharia Engineering.
They are
accused of forming a "club" to rotate contracts with Petrobras and
cream off cash for politicians to look the other way.
"These
people not only corrupted Petrobras but other public bodies. They should
therefore go to jail," said the prosecutor for southern Parana state,
Deltan Dallagnol, who is heading a special unit tasked with investigating the
case.
Under the
alleged scheme, companies which won contracts including illicit surcharges of
between one and six percent of the deal would pass the cash on to
intermediaries who would set up front firms who would produce bogus contracts,
services and consultancy services, with the money laundered through those
firms.
Police
estimate that overall the corrupt network managed to launder around $3.8
billion.

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