By Joel Schectman, Rachel Louise Ensign and Andrew Grossman
U.S. prosecutors are close to a deal with Alstom SA that would
require the engineering giant to pay close to $700 million to
settle a foreign bribery probe, people familiar with the matter
said.
A settlement of that size would be the largest-ever deal between
a corporation and the Justice Department related to foreign
bribery. A deal could be announced in coming weeks.
Prosecutors want to extract a large penalty from Alston in part
because of what they perceive to be the company's initial failure
to cooperate with the government's investigation, the people
said.
The discussions to wrap up the investigation come as General
Electric Co. is closing its purchase of most of the French company.
Alstom has in recent years faced a number of bribery investigations
around the world, and the U.S. probe has also led to charges being
brought against former executives.
Earlier this month, Justice Department criminal division chief
Leslie Caldwell said she expects "additional law-enforcement
actions" soon in the broader probe that involves Alstom.
Write to Joel Schectman at joel.schectman@dowjones.com, Rachel
Louise Ensign at rachel.ensign@wsj.com and Andrew Grossman at
andrew.grossman@wsj.com
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