BAE Systems is to pay a fine of $400m (£250m) after pleading guilty to a charge of conspiring to make false statements to the US government.
The UK's largest defence group has also reached agreement with the UK Serious Fraud Office to plead guilty to breach of duty to keep accounting records.
That case is in relation to payments to a former marketing adviser in Tanzania.
In relation to the UK offence, it will pay a penalty of £30m, some of which will be a fine, some a charity payment.
The charity payment will go to Tanzania.
The last of the offences was committed in 2002. BAE has since reformed the way it conducts business.
However, BBC business editor Robert Peston said: "It is a serious embarrassment to BAE that it is pleading guilty to criminal charges in Britain and America."
Saudi deal
The US fine, agreed with the Department of Justice, relates to undertakings it gave to the US government in 2000 and 2002 in relation to the probity of the way it conducts business.
It is understood that the Department of Justice concluded that BAE breached these undertakings in relation to payments and support services provided to an unnamed Saudi official, as part of the £40bn al-Yamamah contract to supply military equipment to Saudi Arabia.
There was also an infringement of restrictions on the supply of sensitive US technology in deals to supply aircraft in Hungary and the Czech Republic.
Although the UK penalty is far less than Britain's Serious Fraud Office was seeking, it is thought to be a record for a criminal offence by a company in the UK.
The British charge stems from an £88m contract signed in 1999 to supply a radar system to Tanzania.
"Although the fines will be seen by some as damaging to one of the UK's most significant companies, BAE's directors are relieved at what they see as a final settlement of a controversy that has dogged the company for years," added our business editor.
BAE has been advised by its lawyers that the fines are fair.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/business/8500535.stm
Published: 2010/02/05 15:35:36 GMT
© BBC MMX
The UK's largest defence group has also reached agreement with the UK Serious Fraud Office to plead guilty to breach of duty to keep accounting records.
That case is in relation to payments to a former marketing adviser in Tanzania.
In relation to the UK offence, it will pay a penalty of £30m, some of which will be a fine, some a charity payment.
The charity payment will go to Tanzania.
The last of the offences was committed in 2002. BAE has since reformed the way it conducts business.
However, BBC business editor Robert Peston said: "It is a serious embarrassment to BAE that it is pleading guilty to criminal charges in Britain and America."
Saudi deal
The US fine, agreed with the Department of Justice, relates to undertakings it gave to the US government in 2000 and 2002 in relation to the probity of the way it conducts business.
It is understood that the Department of Justice concluded that BAE breached these undertakings in relation to payments and support services provided to an unnamed Saudi official, as part of the £40bn al-Yamamah contract to supply military equipment to Saudi Arabia.
There was also an infringement of restrictions on the supply of sensitive US technology in deals to supply aircraft in Hungary and the Czech Republic.
Although the UK penalty is far less than Britain's Serious Fraud Office was seeking, it is thought to be a record for a criminal offence by a company in the UK.
The British charge stems from an £88m contract signed in 1999 to supply a radar system to Tanzania.
"Although the fines will be seen by some as damaging to one of the UK's most significant companies, BAE's directors are relieved at what they see as a final settlement of a controversy that has dogged the company for years," added our business editor.
BAE has been advised by its lawyers that the fines are fair.
Story from BBC NEWS: http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/1/hi/business/8500535.stm
Published: 2010/02/05 15:35:36 GMT
© BBC MMX