A businessman was charged in a superseding indictment filed
today for his alleged participation in a scheme to bribe senior government
officials of the Republic of Haiti in connection with a planned $84 million
port development project, and to launder funds in order to promote the
bribery. An alleged co-conspirator was
previously charged in the original indictment.
Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Andrew E. Lelling of the
District of Massachusetts, Assistant Director Christopher Hacker of the FBI’s
Criminal Investigative Division and Special Agent in Charge Harold M. Shaw of
the FBI’s Boston Field Office made the announcement.
Roger Richard Boncy, 74, a dual U.S. and Haitian citizen who
resides in Madrid, Spain, was charged in a superseding indictment filed in the
District of Massachusetts with one count of conspiracy to violate the Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and the Travel Act, one count of violating the
Travel Act and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering. The superseding indictment also charges
Boncy’s co-conspirator, Joseph Baptiste, DDS, 66, of Fulton, Maryland, with the
same crimes. Baptiste was originally
charged by indictment in this case in October 2017. Baptiste’s trial is scheduled to begin on
Dec. 3, in the District of Massachusetts in Boston.
The superseding indictment alleges that Boncy and Baptiste
solicited bribes from undercover agents posing as potential investors in
connection with a proposed project to develop a port in the Mȏle St. Nicolas
area of Haiti. The proposed project was
expected to cost approximately $84 million and was to involve the construction
of multiple cement factories, a shipping-vessel recycling station, an
international transshipment station with numerous slips for shipping vessels, a
power plant, a petroleum depot and tourist facilities.
During a recorded meeting at a Boston-area hotel, Boncy and
Baptiste allegedly told the agents that, in order to secure Haitian government
approval of the project, they would funnel the payments to Haitian officials
through a non-profit entity that Baptiste controlled, which was based in
Maryland and purported to help impoverished residents of Haiti. In intercepted telephone calls, Boncy and
Baptiste also allegedly discussed bribing an aide to a high-level elected
official in Haiti with a job on the port development project, in exchange for
the aide’s help in obtaining the elected official’s authorization for the
project.
An indictment is merely an allegation and all defendants are
presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of
law.
The FBI’s Boston Field Office and International Corruption
Unit investigated the case. Trial
Attorney Elina A. Rubin-Smith of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and
Assistant U.S. Attorney Kriss Basil of the District of Massachusetts are
prosecuting the case.
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