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Investigators say Okada violated anti-dummy law

Published: 16 Jul 2013 - 04:30 am | Last Updated: 31 Jan 2022 - 12:03 pm

MANILA: Philippine investigators have recommended filing criminal cases against Japanese tycoon Kazuo Okada and 25 others for putting up dummy companies to acquire land for his planned $2bn Manila club, the country’s Department of Justice (DOJ) said yesterday.

An investigation team from the DOJ and the National Bureau of Investigation also looked into claims of bribery involving Okada and Rodolfo Soriano, a former consultant of the Philippine regulatory agency, but could not prove the allegations, it said.

The “facts and evidence gathered thus far are insufficient to justify the filing of bribery charges,” the Justice department said in a formal statement after making public the investigation report submitted last month to Justice Secretary Leila de Lima.

The payments are also being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation for potential violations of anti-bribery laws. 

The investigating panel found evidence the companies set up by Okada and his associates “were actually dummies or fronts for Universal Entertainment, meant to circumvent or evade laws of nationalisation of certain rights, franchises or privileges,” the DOJ statement said.

Okada controls Universal Entertainment Corp. Under the constitution and public land act, only Filipinos, or entities owned at least 60 percent by Filipino citizens, are allowed to own land, thus restricting Okada or his majority-owned companies to just 40 percent ownership.

The investigating panel said it found Okada, eight of his Japanese associates and 17 Filipinos, including Soriano and some of Okada’s lawyers, all liable to charges of violating the anti-dummy law.

Reuters