Jim Beam Whiskey Distributor Faces Bribery Allegations In India

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In one alleged violation, senior managers at an international Beam unit agreed to pay an Indian official about $18,000 — the cost of 1,000 standard whiskey bottles in the US — to grease the approval process for a new product back in 2011

MUMBAI – A push by the distributor of Jim Beam to get more Indians to drink its booze has left the company with a hangover in the US.

Beam Suntory Inc. has agreed to pick up a roughly $8 million tab for allegedly bribing government officials for years to make inroads in the South Asian country’s highly regulated liquor business, the US Securities and Exchange Commission said in a Monday statement. Between 2006 and 2012, the company made illicit payments through third-party sales promoters and distributors to get licenses and secure prominent placements on store shelves, the SEC said.

In one alleged violation, senior managers at an international Beam unit agreed to pay an Indian official about $18,000 — the cost of 1,000 standard whiskey bottles in the US — to grease the approval process for a new product back in 2011. The one million rupees payment was equivalent to about a year’s worth of salary for the Indian bureaucrat, the SEC said.

Beam, which is best known for its Kentucky Straight Bourbon Whiskey, didn’t admit or deny the allegations. The Illinois company traded on the New York Stock Exchange before being acquired by Japan’s Suntory Holdings Ltd. in 2014.

In a statement, Beam said that it’s “committed to doing business the right way everywhere we operate” and that it first discovered the problems and alerted US authorities. The company has taken corrective action and is cooperating with the Justice Department, which is continuing a probe into the matter, according to the statement.