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Shares in the retailing behemoth Wal-Mart have continued to slide as the likelihood appears to grow that the company will face legal recompense for its alleged actions in Mexico.
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This will create more sweaty brows in Arkansas: Bloomberg reports that the US Justice Department has opened a probe into allegations that Wal-Mart engaged in massive bribery in Mexico.
The company has been smarting since Saturday when The New York Times reported that an internal company inquiry had been swept under the carpet after it said the company’s Mexican subsidiary had paid $24 million in bribes on its way to becoming the Latin American country’s largest employer.
More from GlobalPost: Wal-Mart (WMT) bribery: share prices tumbling after allegations of corruption
The Washington Post reported today that the probe had begun in December. That month, Wal-Mart had informed the US Securities and Exchange Commission that it was conducting its own internal investigation after learning that The Times was reporting on the matter.
Penalties under the 1977 Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, which is designed to prevent US investors from profiting from corrupt corporate activities abroad, are often fixed as a proportion of ill-gotten gains won through bribery. That could leave Wal-Mart de Mexico and its parent company Wal-Mart Stores Inc on the hook for potentially very large sums of money.
Bloomberg said it had learned of the federal probe from a person familiar with the matter who spoke on condition of anonymity as the person was not authorized to speak publicly on the matter.
It is standard practice for US agencies neither to confirm nor to deny the existence of pending investigations. The SEC can also initiate parallel civil action over foreign bribery. Bloomberg said an SEC spokesman declined to discuss a possible probe.
According to The Baltimore Sun, Congressman Elijah Cummings of Baltimore, the top Democrat on the House Oversight Committee, announced he was opening his own investigation and asked company executives for a meeting.
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The Wall Street Journal reported that Wal-Mart today attempted to dampen the fires burning over the bribery allegations by announcing that it had created a new global compliance officer position to ensure the company does not violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in its dealings around the world.
In a statement, the company today also detailed its efforts made in the past year to help itself comply with the law.
Company shares continued to drop today, and were down 2.38 percent by mid-afternoon at $58.1215. Shares in Wal-Mart de Mexico were likewise down nearly 3 percent at 36.88 pesos.
Wal-Mart has a vast global presence. Here's a graphic showing where Wal-Mart operates.
http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/regions/americas/united-states/120424/wal-mart-mexican-bribery-allegations-now-under-u
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Art Basel gathers works from around the world for its annual shows.
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Jaume Plensa's "Tel Aviv Man" at Art Basel, the world’s premier trade fair for leading galleries and collectors focused on modern and contemporary art.
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The front of the Art Basel building. This year’s show attracted 303 of the world’s top galleries from 36 countries, showing the works of more than 2,500 artists. It drew more than 62,000 visitors, a new record.
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Platform Gallery's Chen Wei and one of his "Recovery Room" series at Liste Young Artist's show. By the time the week was over he had sold more than 10 works, with prices ranging from $1,800 to nearly $3,000.
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A performance spectator admires some of the pieces at Basel Art.
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A performance piece at Basel Scope, done by an unidentified nearly naked man who moved in slow motion up and down the aisles dressed like a Greek version of Mars, the god of war.
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A performance piece at Scope. The man clutched a staff, on which a plastic container for motor oil with the BP logo was impaled.
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An installation piece at Basel Art.
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An installation piece with paper tubes at Basel Art.
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A gallery scene at the Scope Basel show.
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A sculpture of Sperone Westwater Gallery's employee, Michael Short, by Evan Penny.
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Evan Penny's sculpture of Michael Short.
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A woman views Jaume Plensa's "Tel Aviv Man," (Study) 2010, Galerie Lelong, Paris.
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"Medusa marinara," 1997 — a photographic representation of the Medusa in spaghetti and tomato sauce by New York-based Brazilian artist, Vic Muniz.
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Children play around Ai Weiwei's piece, "Field," 2010.
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Heimo Sobernig's "Black Cube" sits on display outside outside.
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A piece by Yayoi Kusama titled "Pumkin."
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