The Daily Caveat is written by Michael Thomas, a recovering corporate investigator in the Washington, DC-area.

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8/05/2005
Daimler-Chrysler Facing Bribery, Insider Trading Inquiries
Somewhere inbetween working for one corporate investigative firm and launching this one, The Daily Caveat served as the director of research for the consumer-oriented automotive safety consultancy, Safetyforum.com founded by the inimitable pair of Ralph Hoar and Russwin Francisco. Ever since, TDC has kept a close eye on news and events concerning the major automakers. Today, for Daimler Chrysler the news was, unfortunately, not very good at all.

Via BBCNews:
Bribery probe for DaimlerChrysler

August 5, 2005
BBC News

The US Justice Department has begun an inquiry into allegations of bribery at DamilerChrysler's Mercedes unit, the German-US carmaker has confirmed.
DaimlerChrysler said it was co-operating fully, and has made all its accounts available. The criminal probe escalates a civil one by the US market watchdog, the Wall Street Journal reported on Friday. At issue is whether Mercedes staff paid bribes, and whether senior DaimlerChrysler executives knew.

DaimlerChrysler revealed last year it was being investigated by the US Securities and Exchange Commission. There are now two investigations. "We are working with the SEC and the Justice Department on the investigation. We have made all our accounts available," said a DaimlerChrysler spokesman following the Wall Street Journal on Friday.

In July, DaimlerChrysler said in its interim financial results statement that it had identified "accounts, transactions and related payments that are subject to special scrutiny". It said it was "voluntarily sharing....information from its own investigation" after subpoenas from US federal agencies. DaimlerChrysler said in July that it had not yet reached "any definitive conclusions" about whether the payments it had identified breached the US Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The latest embarrassment to hit the carmaker comes one day after the German financial market watchdog launched a probe into possible insider trading in the firm's shares. DaimlerChrysler's share price surged up 10% last week ahead of chief executive Juergen Schrempp's announcement that he was planning to step down two years early. Mr Schrempp will step down at the end of 2005. He had become a target of investor criticism, drawing fire over the firm's global expansion plans and problems at its flagship Mercedes division.

DaimlerChrysler has seen its earnings come under pressure as steel prices have increased and competitors have offered cut-price deals to lure customers.
The original article appears here.

-- MDT

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