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Reuters
Reuters
World
Kirstin Ridley

UK fraud agency faces "forensic" probe after Unaoil failings

FILE PHOTO: Director of the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) Lisa Osofsky speaks to Reuters in London, Britain, March 28, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

A former senior judge will lead a "forensic and robust" review into failings at the UK Serious Fraud Office (SFO) during a high-profile bribery investigation, Britain's Attorney General said on Wednesday, piling pressure on SFO director Lisa Osofsky.

Attorney General Suella Braverman, the country's most senior law officer, has appointed David Calvert-Smith, a former Director of Public Prosecutions and High Court judge, to lead the review. He is expected to report back by end-May.

FILE PHOTO: Director of the Serious Fraud Office (SFO) Lisa Osofsky poses for a photograph in London, Britain, March 28, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay

"We must ensure lessons are learned so that the failings we saw in the Unaoil case can never happen again," Braverman said in a statement.

She said the review would examine what happened and why - and what changes are necessary to address the failings, as well as any wider problems relating to SFO policies, practices, procedures or culture.

A spokeswoman for the SFO said the agency welcomed the appointment and would cooperate fully with the review.

FILE PHOTO: A sign is displayed in an unmarked Serious Fraud Office vehicle parked outside a building, in Mayfair, central London March 9, 2011. REUTERS/Andrew Winning

Braverman announced a planned SFO review last December after the Court of Appeal quashed the conviction of a former executive at energy consultancy Unaoil, criticising the SFO for disclosure failures that it said undermined his right to a fair trial.

In a stinging rebuke, senior judges said the SFO had refused to hand documents to the defence that showed "wholly inappropriate" contact between the agency and a U.S.-based fixer with vested interests, which had hindered defence lawyers.

A co-defendant jailed in the case has also lodged an appeal against his conviction, threatening further to undermine the hard fought-for prosecution.

But Braverman told a parliamentary select committee last month she had confidence in Osofsky and that the agency was one of the few to send money back to taxpayers.

"I think under her watch there have been some significant and high profile wins which were not easily gained," she said.

Since Osofsky began a five-year term in 2018, the SFO has sealed eight Deferred Prosecution Agreements - court-approved settlements that have drawn a line under allegations of corporate wrongdoing - that have raised more than one billion pounds ($1.35 billion) for stretched state coffers.

Lawmakers, however, have noted that money laundering costs Britain an estimated 100 billion pounds annually, with another 190 billion lost to fraud each year, while the number of prosecutions has fallen.

The SFO, which reports to the Attorney General's Office, has faced repeated attempts by politicians to roll it into a broader crime-fighting body. In a report published this month, lawmakers criticised the country's bewildering number of agencies trying to tackle economic crime.

(Reporting by Kirstin Ridley, Editing by Louise Heavens and Barbara Lewis)

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