
New Jersey Acting U.S. Attorney Alina Habba secured the dismissal of a long-running foreign bribery case on Wednesday, following a federal judgeโs initial refusal to pause the proceedings by President Trumpโs executive order halting enforcement of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA).
The case, filed in 2019, targeted two executives from Teaneck, NJ-based technology outsourcing firm Cognizant, who were accused of authorizing bribes to an Indian official to expedite the construction of a major office complex in Chennai, the New York Postย reported.
โAfter consultation with the Office of the Attorney General, the Government hereby moves to dismiss this matter,โ Habba said in a court filing last week. โThe Governmentโs motion is based on the recent assessment of the Executive Orderโs application to this matter.โ
U.S. District Judge Michael Farbiarz in Newark rejected a request from Habbaโs short-term predecessor, John Giordano, for a six-month delay under President Trumpโs executive order. Instead, the judge gave prosecutors a choice: proceed with the trial as scheduled on April 7 or file a motion to dismiss the case.
Farbiarz, a nominee of former President Joe Biden, granted Habbaโs motion to dismiss in a brief ruling on Thursdayโforegoing the additional review that was recently ordered when federal prosecutors sought to dismiss the corruption case against New York City Mayor Eric Adams.
โThe motion is granted,โ Farbiarz wrote in his ruling, per The Post.
Although the judge avoided a conflict with Habba in this instance, he remains a central figure in another significant legal battle over Trumpโs policies. This other case involves his oversight of the administrationโs attempt to deport former Columbia University student Mahmoud Khalil for his anti-Israel activism.
On Tuesday, Farbiarz declined the Trump administrationโs request to transfer that case to Louisiana, where Khalil is currently incarcerated.
The case dismissed Thursday had been pending against Cognizantโs then-president, Gordon Coburn, and then-chief legal officer, Steven Schwartz.
Last month, Judge Farbiarz denied a request for a trial delay, relying on a commitment from Biden holdover acting U.S. Attorney Vikas Khannaโissued 11 days after Trumpโs February 10 orderโthat โthe Government intends to proceed to trialโ despite the 180-day pause ordered by the president.
Khanna, who is the brother of Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), remained acting U.S. Attorney until March 2, serving for more than a month into Trumpโs term.
In 2019, Cognizant agreed to pay $25 million to settle a Securities and Exchange Commission complaint alleging bribery of a Tamil Nadu state official, following an initial $2 million payment in 2014. Trump has expressed sympathy for the implicated businessmen and denounced the FCPA as an obstacle to international commerce.
โIt sounds so good, but itโs so bad. It hurts the country, and many, many deals are unable to be made because of it,โ Trump said in February as he signed the order freezing enforcement of the FCPA.
โNobody wants to do business because they donโt want to feel like every time they pick up a phone, theyโre going to jail. So, weโll sign this, and it takes courage to sign it because you only get bad publicity when you sign it. It sounds so nice,โ he added.
Habba initially began her stint with the Trump administration as counselor to the president before he named her acting U.S. attorney for New Jersey, which is her home state.
During an interview on โAmerica Reportsโ last month before being named to her new post, Habba spoke with co-host John Roberts and Sandra Smith about the presidentโs first month back in the White House and what to expect as his first 100 days in office rounds out.
โThere was a mandate. It was on November 5th and we swept the country, and thatโs because they werenโt OK with what the last administration did,โ sheย said. โSo, the mandate does not come from the legislative history; it comes from the American people who voted for President Trump and his America First agenda.
โAnd that is what weโre going to do. And that is what we are doing, exactly what Americans voted for, and we are going to continue to do that,โ she added.
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