A former official with Haiti’s
state-owned national telecommunications
company has been sentenced to four years in
prison for his role in a money laundering
conspiracy in connection with a foreign
bribery scheme.
Robert Antoine, 62, of Miami and Haiti,
also was ordered by U.S. District Court Judge
Jose E. Martinez to pay $1,852,209 in
restitution and forfeit $1,580,771, according
to a news release from the U.S. Department of
Justice.
Antoine was
director of international affairs for
Haiti’s state-owned national
telecommunications company, Telecommunications
D’Haiti (Haiti Teleco), from May 2001 to
April 200. In March, he pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to commit money laundering.
He previously
admitted that he accepted bribes from three
U.S. telecommunications companies and then
laundered them through intermediary companies
including J.D.
Locator Services. That company’s
president, Juan Diaz, pleaded guilty on May
15, 2009, to conspiracy to commit violations
of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act and money
laundering, according to the news release.
According to court documents, Antoine
admitted that a portion of the J.D. Locator
funds were also laundered by Jean Fourcand of
Fourcand Enterprises, who pleaded guilty in
February to money laundering. He was sentenced
to six months in prison for his involvement.
Others charged in the scheme were:
- Joel Esquenazi, 53, of Miami, former
president of the telecommunications
company.
- Carlos Rodriguez, 53, of Davie, former
executive vice president of the
telecommunications company.
- Jean Rene Duperval, 43, of Miramar and
Haiti, former director of international
relations for telecommunications at Haiti
Teleco.
- Marguerite Grandison, 40, of Miramar,
former president of Telecom Consulting
Services Corp., and Duperval’s sister.
The trial for these remaining defendants is
scheduled to begin July 19 in U.S. District
Court in Miami.