• Steve LeVine covers foreign affairs for Business Week. He previously was correspondent for Central Asia and the Caucasus for The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times for 11 years. His first book, The Oil and the Glory, a history of the former Soviet Union through the lens of oil, was published in October 2007. Putin’s Labyrinth, his new book, profiles Russia through the lives and deaths of six Russians. The updated paperback was released in April 2009.



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    A Blog on Russia, Energy, the Caspian and
    Beyond

    Monday, October 22, 2007

    The Wheels of Justice in New York

    On Friday, a three-and-a-half-year-old question will hang again before Federal Judge William Pauley in New York: When will James Giffen's foreign bribery trial commence? (Photo by Andy Freeburg)

    The California-born Giffen, former chief oil adviser to Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev, has managed to stall his trial -- the largest foreign bribery case since the U.S. law was passed in 1977 -- since his arrest at JFK Airport in March 2004.

    The trial is bound to be intriguing, not only because of the sums involved, but also because the theatrical Giffen himself -- with a three-and-a-half-decade-long insider's career in the Soviet Union and former Soviet Union -- is one of the most colorful foreign characters of the Caspian oil boom era. The case has come to characterize many of the excesses of the epoch.

    In addition, Nazarbayev is an unindicated co-conspirator -- again, a symbol of the alleged official corruption of the post-Soviet period -- and the case has already damaged U.S. relations with Kazakhstan, an important U.S. ally on the Caspian Sea.

    Federal prosecutors claim that the 66-year-old Giffen passed on some $80 million in payments from U.S. oil companies to Nazarbayev and some other prominent Kazakhs from oil deals that the American negotiated during the 1990s.

    Giffen so far has not disputed that claim, but has asserted that when he served as Nazarbayev's adviser, he was simultaneously consulting with and assisting U.S. intelligence agencies including the CIA on Kazakhstan matters.

    The judicial delay has resulted from wrangling between Giffen's lawyers -- insisting on CIA documentation that they claim will prove his asserted defense -- and ultra-resistant prosecutors from perhaps the most secretive presidential administration in U.S. history.

    Giffen's apparent hope is that eventually the prosecutors will drop some of the more serious charges rather than release documents they are seeking.

    There have been signs of meddling from the Justice Department in terms of attempting to classify sensitive testimony already long released in open court. Otherwise, like Giffen himself, the prosecutors have not publicly indicated that they are prepared to compromise.

    In the past, Judge Pauley has pressed the two sides to accelerate their work so jury selection can begin. But he canceled the most recent scheduled pre-trial hearing, since apparently there was no indication that the sides were nearer to being ready to try the case.

    Will Judge Pauley finally going to put his foot down and set a date? The trial certainly will not begin this year. But if Pauley does act, it could easily start in the first half of 2008.

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    7 Comments:

    Anonymous Orta Asiya said...

    what is the view of the administration on this case? would they like it to go away or are they in favor of the trial?

    October 23, 2007 9:54 AM  
    Blogger Steve said...

    That's a good question Orta. One can imagine but really it would be speculation. Thanks for the question and best, Steve

    October 23, 2007 5:25 PM  
    Blogger zed said...

    more likely, the american big-dogs will trade the issue, in their usual willing & dealing manner. Big oil supply and way too much money invested are on play. The White House (say, Bush people, all from big oil biz)seems to be balancing between the Law and what they call "national interests", i.e. the case is slowly turning out to be a "just business" matter, i.e. it is obvious that charging the Kazakh top guy will ruin their biz in KZ, and definitely will make the top guy moving towards China and Russia, who have no problem with dealing with such regime...and so their primary goal is to get out of this shit with as less harm to oil biz & money as possible. In the prejudice of everything else including their hypocritical values declared at every world's corner, because, when money talk the rests keep silent. What do they have left to manage the situation? I can perfectly see an answer, but time will tell as well. Whatever it ends up,it is time to think of immigration, rather far off the country which I used to call "my country", and which was so unscrupulously sold out.

    October 24, 2007 1:44 AM  
    Blogger zed said...

    ...and by the way, have you ever thought of translating the book into Russian?

    October 24, 2007 2:00 AM  
    Blogger Candy Gourlay said...

    btw Steve, congratulations on the release of your book! At last!

    October 24, 2007 6:57 AM  
    Anonymous Anonymous said...

    I think the issue will slowly go away, if it went to trial it would get most people thinking, “why aren’t the payers (Mobil/Texaco & their successor companies etc.) on trial?, rather than the middleman”.

    So I think the “stooges” in this case are Baker Hughes who were sacrificed on the altar of FCPA compliance in an extremely politicised judgement (download from the SEC website and contrast the wording with that of the similar cases against ABB / Vetco Gray).

    October 27, 2007 1:27 PM  
    Blogger Steve said...

    Hi Zed and Anonymous, I have been hearing in recent days that you both may be right -- that the case could drag on and on, and that in fact BOTH sides prefer it that way. The prosecution continues to make secret motions (made for the judge's eyes only) that delay the case again and again. We may indeed see this drift into 2009 and possibly further. Thanks for your remarks, and for dropping by. Best Steve

    October 27, 2007 9:38 PM  

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