No menu items!

COSTA RICA'S LEADING ENGLISH LANGUAGE NEWSPAPER

HomeArchiveFormer Alcatel Executive Faces Charges in U.S.

Former Alcatel Executive Faces Charges in U.S.

One of the major players in the corruption scandals that swept Costa Rica in 2004 is facing charges in the United States for allegedly paying Costa Rican officials millions of dollars in bribes related to telecommunication contracts here.

Christian Sapsizian, 60, multinational telecom company Alcatel’s former senior vice-president for Latin America, was arrested Nov. 20 at MiamiInternationalAirport. He appeared Monday in Miami Federal Court, was freed the following day on $525,000 bail, and is scheduled for arraignment Dec. 18, U.S.-based BusinessWeek magazine reported.

His lawyer, Roy Kahn, told the magazine Sapsizian will plead not guilty, according to a story on www.businessweek.com.

A Federal Bureau of Investigations (FBI) affidavit states that Sapsizian offered kickbacks to an “unnamed senior official” within the Costa Rican Electricity Institute (ICE), which oversees the country’s telecom sector, in 2000. The FBI has traced $2.4 million Alcatel paid that official, as well as $2.56 million to the official’s wife, Business Week reported.

In return, the official agreed to vote in favor of giving Alcatel a contract, according to the FBI. (Alcatel won a $149 million telecom contract with ICE in 2001.)

Alcatel – now Alcatel-Lucent, after buying New Jersey-based Lucent Technologies last month for $11.6 billion – announced this week that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission is also investigating the payments the company made in foreign countries. A company statement released Tuesday indicated that Alcatel-Lucent will “cooperate fully in any inquiry or investigation into these matters.”

In Costa Rica, investigations into corruption allegations in the same case are ongoing, but have produced no public results in the more than two years since they began. In October 2004, former ICE board member José Antonio Lobo admitted he’d received payments from Alcatel; his wife, U.S. citizen Jean Gallup, allegedly received $2.4 million related to the Alcatel contract (TT, Oct. 8, 2004).

Lobo also testified that former Costa Rican President Miguel Angel Rodríguez (1998-2002), who had just taken office as Secretary General of the Organization of American States (OAS), accepted 40% of the Alcatel-related kickbacks (TT, Oct. 8, 2004). Rodríguez stepped down from his OAS post soon after (TT, Oct. 15, 2004).

 

Trending Now

Costa Rica Probes Osa Permits in Fila Costeña Amid Eco Concerns

Costa Rica's Comptroller General of the Republic (CGR) has accepted a complaint and sent it to its oversight unit for review. The focus is...

OIJ Arrests Suspect in Deadly San José Hotel Oriente Fire

Authorities arrested a 42-year-old man this week in connection with the deadly fire at Hotel Oriente that claimed five lives in early October. The...

Costa Rica Mandates Mangrove Restoration at RIU Guanacaste Hotel

Costa Rica's Environmental Administrative Tribunal has issued a directive for the RIU Guanacaste hotel complex to repair mangrove and forest areas harmed during its...

Whooping Cough Spreads Faster in Costa Rica This Year

Health authorities in Costa Rica report a steady climb in pertussis cases throughout 2025, prompting alerts for residents and visitors alike. The Ministry of...

Shakira Adds Two El Salvador Concerts After 24-Hour Sellout Frenzy

Colombian singer Shakira has confirmed two extra performances in El Salvador next year after her initial three dates sold out in under 24 hours....

Trump-Backed Asfura Wins Honduras Presidential Election

The Honduran National Electoral Council on Wednesday named Nasry Asfura the winner of the country's presidential election, capping a tense period of delays and...
Avatar
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Coffee Maker Chorreador
Costa Rica Travel Insurance
Costa Rica Travel

Latest News from Costa Rica