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South Korean gets five years in oil-for-food case
22 Feb 2007 23:13:53 GMT
Source: Reuters

(Adds details about case)

By Paritosh Bansal

NEW YORK, Feb 22 (Reuters) - A U.S. judge sentenced South Korean lobbyist Tongsun Park to five years in prison on Thursday for money-laundering and acting as an unregistered foreign agent for Iraq in the U.N. oil-for-food scandal.

U.S. District Court Judge Denny Chin gave Park the maximum sentence allowed by law, ordered three more years of supervised release when he gets out, fined him $15,000 and made him subject to $1.2 million in further asset forfeitures.

"You blatantly disregarded the law," Chin told Park in the sentencing hearing, noting that Park had received manila envelopes stuffed with $100 bills.

Park, 71, and his lawyers have always maintained his innocence and have sought leniency due to his ailing health.

In July, a jury convicted Park in the first U.S. federal trial related to the U.N. oil-for-food program, which was designed to provide humanitarian relief to Iraq while it was under international sanctions for its 1990 invasion of Kuwait.

The $67 billion program spawned a kickback and bribery side business that implicated officials, companies or politicians from some 40 countries, according to a panel headed by former U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Paul Volcker.

Prosecutors say Park received some $2 million from Saddam Hussein's Iraqi government and had sought up to $10 million on the premise that he needed it to bribe his friend, former U.N. Secretary-General Boutros Boutros-Ghali. There was no evidence Boutros-Ghali received any money.

U.S. prosecutors say Park acted on behalf of Saddam by lobbying U.S. and U.N. officials to drop economic sanctions against Saddam and that Park broke the law by failing to notify the Justice Department.

Park has been in jail since he was detained in Mexico in January 2006 and handed over to U.S. authorities.

Park gained notoriety in the 1970s as a lobbyist who gave hundreds of thousands of dollars to members of Congress as part of the influence-peddling scandal dubbed "Koreagate." Charges against him were dropped.

In a separate case, Chin on Thursday dismissed two criminal charges against Bayoil Supply & Trading, a Bahamian company owned by David Chalmers, who is charged with of providing kickbacks to the Saddam government in exchange for getting contracts under the oil-for-food scheme.

Chalmers, fellow Texas oilman Oscar Wyatt, four other individuals and five companies have been indicted on charges including conspiracy and wire fraud for their role in the oil-for-food program.

Chin dismissed the counts against Bayoil Supply & Trading for engaging in a financial transaction with the government of a country supporting terrorism and for violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act because the law only applies to American people or firms, Chin wrote.

The conspiracy and wire fraud charges remain against Bayoil Supply & Trading.
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A protester takes part in an anti-war march through the streets in Tokyo March 21, 2007, following the fourth anniversary of the war in Iraq. The characters in black on his mask read "The world is against war".