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Atkinsrealis Group Inc T.ATRL

Alternate Symbol(s):  SNCAF

Atkinsrealis Group Inc., formerly SNC-Lavalin Group Inc., is a professional services, and project management company. It delivers end-to-end services across the whole life cycle of an asset including consulting, and advisory and environmental services. Its segments include Engineering Services; Nuclear; O&M; Linxon; LSTK Projects, and Capital. The Engineering Services segment includes consultancy, engineering, design and project management services. The Nuclear segment supports clients across the entire nuclear lifecycle with the full spectrum of services from consultancy, EPCM services, field services, technology services, spare parts, reactor support and decommissioning and waste management. The O&M segment consists of providing operations, maintenance, and asset management solutions. The Linxon segment offers engineering, procurement, management, and construction services. The LSTK Projects is comprised of the remaining LSTK construction contracts of the Company.


TSX:ATRL - Post by User

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Post by kijijion Feb 02, 2019 5:07pm
121 Views
Post# 29310728

Former SNC CEO pleads guilty in superhospital fraud case

Former SNC CEO pleads guilty in superhospital fraud caseGetting rid of the the rot.  Time to start moving up.

Pierre Duhaime's trial on charges of fraud, conspiracy and forgery was set to start Monday
CBC News · Posted: Feb 01, 2019 9:58 AM ET | Last Updated: February 1
 
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 in a Montreal courtroom Friday morning to helping a public servant commit breach of trust, six years after he was first arrested and accused of bribing public officials.
 
In 2009, Duhaime was informed that an employee from his engineering company was in contact with Yana Elbaz, an official from the McGill University Hospital Centre — right around the time SNC-Lavalin was trying to secure the contract to build the MUHC superhospital in Montreal.
 
That contract was worth $1.3 billion. Duhaime, now 64, never looked into that information, thereby committing a crime.
 
"Instead of acting upon that knowledge, and stopping this from happening, which he could have done, he chose to look the other way," said Robert Rouleau, spokesperson for the Crown prosecutor's office.
 
How 'wilful blindness' was the undoing of engineering giant SNC-Lavalin's ex-CEO
Last year, Elbaz, who was disgraced MUHC head Arthur Porter's right-hand man, pleaded guilty to charges including breach of trust and conspiracy. He admitted to receiving a $10-million bribe from SNC-Lavalin.
 
Porter was also accused of accepting a bribe in the case, but he died in Panama in 2015 and charges against him were subsequently dropped.
According to the agreed upon statement of facts, Duhaime did not know about or authorize the bribes.
 
Quebec's anti-corruption squad arrested Duhaime in 2012 on 15 charges, including fraud, conspiracy and forgery. Fourteen of those charges were withdrawn Friday.
 
His trial was supposed to begin next Monday.
 
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. He will not serve any jail time.
 
Rouleau said Duhaime wasn't considered to be one of the key actors in the bribery scandal, and those who are questioning the severity of the sentence should look at it from Duhaime's perspective.
 
Duhaime did not speak to reporters outside the courtroom. His lawyer, Michel Massicotte, said his client regrets what happened.
 
4th to plead guilty
In total, nine people were charged in the case, which one Quebec police investigator called "the biggest case of corruption fraud in Canadian history."
 
Duhaime is the fourth person to plead guilty. One other person was acquitted, and three had charges dropped.
Last November, Elbaz was sentenced to 39 months in prison.
 
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.
 
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.
 
We have always maintained that those who committed any criminal wrongdoing should be held to account, and in fact, this will be the case. 
 
In a statement, SNC-Lavalin stressed that there were no charges laid against the company and that it has "always actively co-operated with the authorities."
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