As highlighted in prior posts here and here, in 2019 and 2020 (in a rather unusual Foreign Corrupt Practices Act enforcement action) the DOJ criminally charged various individuals associated with Ohio-based European Adoption Consultants Inc. (EAC) with FCPA and related criminal charges in connection with a Ugandan bribery scheme and other conduct.
One defendant, Robin Longoria, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to violate the FCPA’s anti-bribery provisions and to commit wire fraud and visa fraud “for her role in a scheme to corruptly facilitate adoptions of Ugandan children through bribing Ugandan officials and defrauding U.S. adoptive parents and the U.S. Department of State.” The subsequently charged defendants, Margaret Cole, Debra Parris and Dorah Mirembe, appear to be mounting a defense.
Recently, the DOJ filed a motion seeking a court order allowing its privilege “filter team” (which currently possesses thousands of documents related to EAC and its former attorneys that were obtained during the investigation) to disclose the documents to the prosecution team because EAC’s assertion of privilege no longer applies because EAC is “defunct and thus no longer has the ability to assert privilege over those materials.”