The Swedish telecoms group Ericsson broke a formal agreement with US prosecutors by withholding evidence about its involvement in corruption, the firm has announced.
The US Department of Justice had notified Ericsson that the firm has failed, as required, to hand over details of alleged corruption in Iraq to DoJ prosecutors.
The admission comes days after it was revealed that Ericsson may have channelled cash to Islamic State terrorists and had made suspicious payments totalling millions of dollars to sustain its business in Iraq between 2011 and 2019.
The announcement on Wednesday came as Ericsson struggled to contain a growing controversy over its alleged misconduct. It is the second time the multinational has been found to have broken its agreement with the DoJ.
Ericsson’s shares have lost nearly a third of their value since further revelations about wrongdoing emerged last month.
The latest disclosures originate from an investigation by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists (ICIJ). It obtained confidential documents that recorded the results of internal inquiries commissioned by Ericsson into alleged corruption by the company around the world.
The documents reveal how Ericsson is alleged to have helped pay bribes to IS in order to continue selling the company’s services after the terrorism group seized control of large parts of Iraq.
The leaked documents were shared with ICIJ’s media partners, including the Guardian, the BBC and the Washington Post, and were published on Sunday.
On Tuesday, the DOJ told Ericsson it believed the firm had broken the terms of a settlement reached in 2019.
Under the settlement, Ericsson paid $1bn (£750m) to end a corruption investigation by the DoJ. The firm admitted it had
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