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Cognizant Reaches $95 Million Settlement With US Shareholders Over India Bribery Allegations

Shareholders accused Cognizant of failing to disclose payments made to obtain permits for facilities in SEZs, including its Indian headquarters in Chennai, where it could enjoy tax and other benefits.
Reuters
Sep 08 2021
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Shareholders accused Cognizant of failing to disclose payments made to obtain permits for facilities in SEZs, including its Indian headquarters in Chennai, where it could enjoy tax and other benefits.
Cognizant said it expected insurers to cover a substantial majority of the settlement payment. Credit: Reuters
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New York: Cognizant Technology Solutions Corp has reached a $95 million settlement to resolve a lawsuit accusing the information technology services company of defrauding shareholders by concealing bribes to officials in India.

A preliminary settlement of the proposed class action was filed on Tuesday with the federal court in Newark, New Jersey, and requires a judge's approval.

Shareholders accused Cognizant of failing to disclose payments made to obtain permits for facilities in "special economic zones," including its Indian headquarters in Chennai, where it could enjoy tax and other benefits.

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Cognizant's share price fell 13.3% on September 30, 2016, after the Teaneck, New Jersey-based company said it was looking into bribery allegations, and whether there were violations of the federal Foreign Corrupt Practices Act.

The defendants, including former president Gordon Coburn and former chief legal officer Steven Schwartz, denied wrongdoing in agreeing to settle. Cognizant said it expected insurers to cover a substantial majority of the settlement payment.

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In February 2019, Cognizant agreed to pay $25 million to settle a related US Securities and Exchange Commission civil probe.

US prosecutors also charged Coburn and Schwartz that month with FCPA and other violations. Those criminal cases remain pending.

Lawyers for Coburn and Schwartz did not immediately respond on Wednesday to requests for comment.

(Reuters)

This article went live on September eighth, two thousand twenty one, at fifty-two minutes past seven in the evening.

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