Financial Forensics: The Due Diligence Files
The company needed raw materials. Its supplier was partly owned by its controlling shareholder. The controlling shareholder also controlled the board of the supplier. So when it came time to negotiate the price of those raw materials, one company sat on both sides of the table. That is the structure. What made it a criminal enterprise was the mechanism by which the pricing advantage was secured. Not through the ownership structure itself—that was disclosed. Through a separate, internal department whose sole function was to pay bribes to the government officials who controlled what the supplier charged. The department had a name: The Division of Structured Operations. 🔴 Every corporate failure leaves behind a pattern. FFL Risk Pattern Scan provides access to a searchable library of documented corporate collapses, frauds and restructurings that can be filtered by geography, sector, collapse mechanism and fraud vector. Compare live opportunities against historical cases using pattern matching and risk assessment tools designed for investors, lenders and deal teams. All analysis runs locally and remains private. https://risk-pattern-scan.lovable.app/ [https://risk-pattern-scan.lovable.app/] This financial autopsy deconstructs the fifteen-year structural corruption scheme orchestrated by Braskem and its controlling shareholder, Odebrecht, which resulted in the largest foreign bribery settlement in history in December 2016. We map the precise corporate architecture that enabled Latin America's largest petrochemical company to industrialize corruption as a standard business function. The analysis details how the division operated a shadow budget through un-consolidated offshore shells, utilizing an encrypted communications platform known as Drousys where public officials and politicians were tracked entirely by code names. The episode outlines the specific actionability of the public document trail, focusing on Braskem's annual Form 20-F filings. While the company disclosed its structural dependency on Petrobras for naphtha—which accounted for seventy-six percent of its production costs—it completely omitted the corrupt mechanism governing the pricing formula. We deconstruct how this related-party pricing manipulation was exposed in 2014 through the public plea testimony of Petrobras supply director Paulo Roberto Costa, who admitted to receiving five million dollars annually to artificiality lower Braskem's input costs. Finally, we cross-reference this with the broader Petrobras file, differentiating how Braskem inverted the standard cartel procurement mechanism by pushing corruption into the cost structure rather than the revenue side, converting bribery into an operational margin expansion. Financial Forensics Labs — Every collapse has a pattern. We dissect it. Layer by layer. Braskem Odebrecht FCPA foreign bribery criminal conviction settlement, Division of Structured Operations shadow budget bribe department, Drousys encrypted platform code names corporate corruption, Petrobras naphtha supply contract related party pricing formula, Paulo Roberto Costa Lava Jato plea agreement testimony, corporate governance controlling shareholder overlapping board, cost structure margin inflation raw material input advantage, Form 20F SEC disclosure omissions material risk factors, Lei do Bem tax exemption legislative bribery schemes, Petrobras file cartel procurement revenue fraud comparison, Marcelo Odebrecht criminal sentencing corporate restructuring bankruptcy, offshore shell entity network banking secrecy jurisdictions, compliance internal controls accounting validation breakdown, financial forensics corporate corruption analysis framework DESCRIPCIÓN SEOKEYWORDS
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