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Korean firm tied to Trump lawyer got U.S. contract despite corruption probe

The following article by Shawn Boburg and Aaron C. Davis was posted on the Washington Post website June 18, 2018:

Credit: © Getty Images

A South Korean aviation firm that hired President Trump’s personal lawyer Michael Cohen failed last year to disclose that it was the subject of a corruption investigation as it won work from the U.S. military, records show.

On Oct. 11, nine current and former executives at Korea Aerospace Industries were indicted in Seoul on charges that included bribery, embezzlement and defrauding the South Korean government, records show.

Just two weeks later, KAI cleared a business integrity review by the U.S. Air Force and won a contract worth up to $48  million — its largest ever from the Air Force — to maintain fighter jets.

Experts said the criminal case should have subjected the company to additional scrutiny. But KAI did not alter filings it had previously submitted to the U.S. government certifying that none of its executives were under indictment, according to a public database of federal contracting information.

Cohen was a consultant for KAI at the time, part of an arrangement that lasted less than six months and spanned the indictments and the awarding of the Air Force contract. Cohen’s firm was paid $150,000 when the relationship ended in November. There is no indication Cohen was involved in the awarding of the contract. KAI said he was not, and the Air Force said no senior leaders or contracting officers were contacted by Cohen.

Even so, the payment to Cohen’s firm could draw new attention to the aviation company’s ethics disclosures and to a much larger contract it is considered a front-runner to win with Lockheed Martin to provide the U.S. military with more than 300 super­sonic training jets — a deal worth an estimated $18 billion.

Companies are required to provide “immediate written notice” if their “certification was erroneous when submitted or has become erroneous by reason of changed circumstances,” according to federal guidelines.

Two former senior attorneys with the Air Force, with a combined 20 years in charge of vetting Air Force contractors, told The Washington Post that the corruption allegations should have triggered a thorough review and potentially other actions intended to protect tax dollars.

“If there was an indictment and the company did not check the box, it’s a serious issue,” said Steve Shaw, who for 16 years was the Air Force’s senior debarring official, in charge of deciding when a company’s conduct disqualified it from getting federal contracts. “This is where the government relies on bidders.”

The Air Force declined to answer questions about how KAI cleared its business integrity review. It also declined to say if it knew of KAI’s corruption scandal or if it had addressed it with the company.

“The Air Force is protecting the integrity of the contracting process as we do with all procurements,” chief Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek said.

Stephen Ryan, an attorney for Cohen, did not respond to requests for comment.

KAI acknowledged paying Cohen’s firm and said it was for advice on accounting. But the company did not respond to follow-up questions from The Post regarding the nature of Cohen’s work and KAI’s lack of disclosures to the U.S. government.

A spokeswoman for Lockheed said KAI informed the U.S. aerospace giant of the corruption charges against its executives. But a person familiar with the matter said Lockheed, the prime contractor in the bid,had not been asked by the Air Force to forward the disclosure and therefore had not done so. Lockheed said it could not attest to whether KAI followed disclosure requirements for the contract it won last fall.

“We have no involvement in the contracting certifications KAI may have with the U.S. government as a prime contractor, such as for the F-16 depot maintenance contracts,” Lockheed said in a statement. “It is the responsibility of every prime contractor to make sure it is compliant with applicable government contracting rules.”

American outreach

KAI and the South Korean government have long sought U.S. military contracts as part of an effort to turn the state-backed aircraft manufacturer into a global player in the defense industry.

Looming most heavily for KAI has been what the Pentagon, under President Trump, would do about training jets — KAI’s flagship aircraft, developed with billions in South Korean government money.

South Korean President Moon Jae-in made a direct appeal to Trump on behalf of KAI last June during his first visit to D.C.

Moon assured Trump that South Korea would purchase more American war planes and, in turn, urged him to buy the KAI-Lockheed training jets, according to Korean media reports.

Neither the White House nor Moon’s administration responded to requests for comment.

In the following weeks, KAI hired Cohen’s firm, company officials have said, for advice on accounting.

Cohen is a former personal-injury attorney who ran a taxi business in New York City before he joined the Trump Organization more than a decade ago, earning a reputation as Trump’s legal bulldog.

Last year, Cohen was quietly building up a stable of new clients: KAI and other large companies with interests before the U.S. government. Their payments to Cohen’s company, Essential Consultants, were revealed last month by Michael Avenatti, an attorney for Stormy Daniels, the adult-film star who was paid $130,000 shortly before the 2016 presidential election to keep quiet about her alleged affair with Trump.

Cohen’s payment to Daniels came from an Essential Consultants bank account, the same account that received payments from KAI, pharmaceutical company Novartis and telecommunications giant AT&T. Special counsel Robert S. Mueller III has sought information from some of Cohen’s clients.

After the payments came to light, Novartis and AT&T said that they regretted hiring Cohen’s firm. They said they did so after being approached by him, in the hopes he could provide insight into the Trump administration.

KAI has expressed no similar regrets. Without elaborating, the company KAI said that it approached Essential Consultants, a company that was less than a year old and had virtually no public footprint.

A KAI spokesman, Oh Sung-keun, said Cohen’s firm provided advice on “Cost Accounting Standards,” arcane rules that apply to U.S. government contracts and on an “overall revamp” of the company’s internal accounting system.

He said the hiring of Essential Consultants was not related to any bid for U.S. contracts and did not involve any lobbying.

“I do not know whether the team in charge knew about Cohen’s connection to Trump when working with Essential Consultants,” Oh said in an interview. He also said that, to his knowledge, Cohen had no “direct contact with the KAI team.”

However, Mark Ko, who runs a retail Korean-food business in Los Angeles, told The Post in an email that he briefly served as an interpreter between Cohen and KAI. The discussions involved accounting, he said. Ko said last month that FBI agents had recently interviewed him. He did not respond to subsequent messages.

A raid and a resignation

Korean authorities on July 14 raided the office and car of Ha Sung-yong, who was then KAI’s CEO. Ha resigned later that week, on July 20. A KAI spokesman told The Post that Cohen’s work for the firm began before Ha’s resignation but would not specify a date.

In the following weeks, the corruption case progressed rapidly. Ha was arrested Sept. 20.

A day later, the company’s vice president in charge of most overseas projects was found dead at his home, having apparently hanged himself. The Korea Herald reported that authorities found a three-page suicide note next to his body and released one anodyne excerpt: “I have done my best, but it’s so unfortunate that things didn’t work out.”

On Oct. 11, prosecutors in Seoul announced indictments against Ha and 11 others.

Under Ha, prosecutors said, executives set up a slush fund for elaborate spending: Ha had secretly taken an ownership stake in a subcontractor and then driven business to that company. The chief executive was also accused of bribing politicians and military leaders responsible for evaluating KAI’s helicopters — which were also grounded last year because of safety concerns. The alleged bribes included jobs for the children of the officers testing the aircraft.

In the following weeks, the corruption case progressed rapidly. Ha was arrested Sept. 20.

A day later, the company’s vice president in charge of most overseas projects was found dead at his home, having apparently hanged himself. The Korea Herald reported that authorities found a three-page suicide note next to his body and released one anodyne excerpt: “I have done my best, but it’s so unfortunate that things didn’t work out.”

On Oct. 11, prosecutors in Seoul announced indictments against Ha and 11 others.

Under Ha, prosecutors said, executives set up a slush fund for elaborate spending: Ha had secretly taken an ownership stake in a subcontractor and then driven business to that company. The chief executive was also accused of bribing politicians and military leaders responsible for evaluating KAI’s helicopters — which were also grounded last year because of safety concerns. The alleged bribes included jobs for the children of the officers testing the aircraft.

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