DOJ continued to focus on FCPA enforcement, bringing a second case yesterday involving bribes paid to Panamanian officials to secure business for a Virginia company. This case was brought against John Warwick, the president of Ports Engineering Consultants Corporation, as well as of Overman Associates, and Overman de Panama. The latter was owned by Associates. U.S. v. Warwick, Case No. 3:09CR449 (E.D.Va. Filed Dec. 15, 2009). A previous case against Charles Jumet, who pleaded guilty in connection with this matter, is discussed here.

According to the court papers, Ports Engineering is a Panama company. It is affiliated with Overman Associates, and engineering firm based in Virginia Beach, Va. Ports Engineering was created so that Overman Associates and others could obtain a maritime contract from the Panama government.

The indictment charges Mr. Warwick with one count of conspiracy to violate the FCPA. Specifically, it alleges that from 1997 through 2003 Mr. Warwick made approximately $200,000 in corrupt payments to Panamanian government officials. The payments were to secure a twenty year no bid contract for Ports Engineering. Under the contract, the company maintained lighthouses and buoys along Panama’s water ways.

The payments, according to the court papers, were made to the former administrator and deputy administrator of the Panama Maritime Authority. Payments were also made to a high-ranking elected executive official of the Republic of Panama.

Previously, Charles Jumet pleaded guilty in connection with bribes paid to secure business for Ports Authority. Mr. Jumet pleaded guilty to a two-count information charging him with conspiring to make corrupt payments to a foreign government official and making a false statement. The indictment against Mr. Warwick charges that he conspired with Mr. Jumet in making the corrupt payments. The information naming Mr. Jumet alleged he made the false statement in an effort to cover up the payments.

Government prosecutors have an obligation to bring meritorious cases. Equally important is their duty to protect and safeguard the constitutional rights of the accused. The results in four recent high profile stock option backdating cases suggest that the government has focused on its obligation to prosecute, but lost sight of its duty to protect.

Yesterday two high profile criminal stock options backdating cases were dismissed because of prosecutorial misconduct. The charges against Broadcom Corp. co-founder Dr. Henry Samueli and its former CFO William J. Ruehle were dismissed. Both men were charged with multiple felony counts centered on stock option backdating claims. U.S. v. Nicholas, Case No. SACR 08-139 (C.D. Cal.). The court’s ruling came during the trial of Mr. Ruehle. Mr. Nicholas was scheduled to stand trial in February.

The defense motion requesting dismissal is based on a series of wrongful acts by the government. These include interfering with defense witnesses, intimidating other witnesses, entering into invalid plea agreements, leaking grand jury information to try and coerce a witness to cooperate, eliciting false testimony and failing to produce material helpful to the defense. Key claims in the motion include:

• Threats of perjury charges against immunized witness David Dull, the former general counsel of the company, if he testified in accord with his SEC testimony;

• Leaking information to the press about Dr. Henry Samueli’s grand jury appearance in which he invoked the Fifth Amendment in an effort to secure his cooperation;

• Causing another witness who invoked her Fifth Amendment rights to be fired from a new job by telephoning the employer and stating that the witness was not cooperating in an effort to compel cooperation; and

• Eliciting false testimony from another witness about the deal she had made with the government and then failing to correct the testimony.

The dismissal follows an equally stunning ruling last week regarding Broadcom co-founder Henry Samueli. That ruling, discussed here, was also made during the trial of Mr. Ruehle. The court had taken the extraordinary step of granting immunity Mr. Samueli so he could testify for the defense. The government refused a request for immunity. Following two days of testimony, the court concluded that Mr. Samueli had not made false statements to the SEC in his testimony and vacated his prior guilty plea to that charge. U.S. v. Samueli, Case No. SA CR 08-156 (C.D. Cal.).

Previously, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals had reversed the conviction of former Brocade Communications Systems, Inc. CEO Gregory Reyes, discussed here, because of prosecutorial misconduct. U.S. v. Reyes, Case No. 08-10047 (9th Cir. Filed Aug. 18, 2009). The prosecution of Mr. Reyes, announced with much fanfare by the U.S. Attorney and the SEC, was based on claims of stock option backdating. U.S. v. Reyes, Case No. C 06-04435 (N.D.CA.). Mr. Reyes is awaiting retrial.

Rulings such as these raise disturbing questions. The decisions are not on the merits. Yet, each raises fundamental questions about the merits of the case. The misconduct here does not involve simple procedural errors. Actions such as threatening witnesses, evoking perjured testimony and accepting baseless guilty pleas cuts to the core of the criminal justice system, suggesting that the cases lack merit. Yet, each of these men has been forced to endure what must seem to be an endless ordeal because of what appears to be serious over reaching by prosecutors. Indeed, Mr. Reyes still faces a retrial.

In the future, before charges are brought, before the “win at all cost” mentality which obviously polluted these cases takes over, prosecutors would do well to recall the directive of the Supreme Court years ago. In Berger v. U.S., 295 U.S. 78, 88 (1935) the high court held that a prosecutor is “the representative not of an ordinary party to a controversy, but of a sovereignty whose obligation to govern impartially is as compelling as its obligation to govern at all; and whose interest, therefore, in a criminal prosecution is not that it shall win a case, but that justice shall be done. . . while he may strike hard blows, he is not at liberty to strike foul ones.” Perhaps this quote should be inscribed on the wall of each U.S. Attorney’s Office.