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Sunday, February 9, 2014

Expose Russia Olympic Bribes: Olympic Bribes and Construction Bribes Can Be The Basis of Large Whistleblower Rewards

Expose Russia Olympic Bribes: Olympic Bribes and Construction Bribes Can Be The Basis of Large Whistleblower Rewards by International Whistleblower Lawyer Jason S. Coomer

Russian whistleblowers, public officials, business professionals, employees of multinational corporations, and others that have evidence of Russian government corruption are eligible for large whistleblower financial rewards.  Russian government corruption that can be the basis for these
awards include illegal payments for business; bribes for construction contracts; illegal incentives for oil, gas and mineral leases; illegal kickbacks for regulatory approval; and other violations of Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA).  Russian whistleblowers and multinational corporation whistleblowers are needed to step up to report illegal corrupt practices and can receive large financial rewards for being the first to properly expose significant Russian government corruption.

If you are aware of a significant Foreign Corrupt Practice Act (FCPA) violation, please feel free to go to the following webpage: Russian Whistleblower Rewards or contact Russian Government Whistleblower  Lawyer, Jason Coomer via e-mail message

Contractor flees Russia after refusing to pay Olympic bribes - CBS News

"A new report by a Russian anti-corruption group says the total cost for the games has soared to about $50 billion -- more than five times as much as the last winter games.  Yet the best place to discover why costs have risen so high may not be among the gleaming new venues, but on a street in a town just outside London, where Valery Morozov, once an Olympic contractor -- now a fugitive -- lives."

"Miscalculated, he said, because the local Olympic organizers told him to add about $30 million
to his bill for various Sochi construction projects, and then pay that money back to them as kickbacks."

"The only one reason for this was their pockets," Morozov said. "There was only one reason." Morozov rebuilt some of the crumbling facilities of the old Sochi resort. The kickbacks, he said, followed a familiar formula. The kickback was about 40 percent of the total contract." 

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