Japanese advertising giant Dentsu was one of the driving forces behind the 2020 Tokyo Olympics, helping bring in a record-shattering $US3.6 billion ($5.3 billion) in sponsorships and coordinating everything down to the smallest details.
On Tuesday, Japan’s prosecutors accused the company of breaking the law in the process, claiming it, and five others, conspired to evade the public bidding process leading up to the Games.
The Tokyo Olympics were held in 2021.Credit:AP
The accusations came as part of a widening investigation into corruption surrounding the 2020 Olympics, which were delayed until 2021 because of the pandemic.
Japanese prosecutors have cast a wide net, charging executives from some of Japan’s top companies with bribery as they vied for high-profile sponsorship deals and sought contracts for, among other things, manufacturing Olympic uniforms and publishing printed materials for the Games.
The most recent charges relate to bid rigging, with prosecutors asserting that employees of Dentsu and other companies — including Japan’s second-largest advertising firm, Hakuhodo — violated the country’s anti-monopoly law by circumventing the public bidding process for test events before the Games. The events were essentially dress rehearsals designed to help organisers assess their readiness for hosting the main event.
Rather than engage in open competition for contracts, the companies colluded to select a single firm to bid, the prosecutors said in a charging statement. In doing so, they had “substantially limited competition,” prosecutors added.
The headquarters of Japanese advertising company Dentsu Inc in Tokyo.Credit:AP
The charges came after Japan’s Fair Trade Commission on Tuesday filed a complaint against the companies and seven individuals, including Yasuo Mori, a former executive on the Olympic organising committee. In February, prosecutors arrested Mori and three of the people charged on Tuesday.
Dentsu is widely considered one of Japan’s most influential firms, working closely with the country’s most powerful companies as well as its ruling political party. It is also a powerful figure in the world of international sports promotion, playing a critical role in putting together the Tokyo Olympic Games, an event from which it stood to profit enormously.
In a statement on its website, Dentsu said that it “takes this situation seriously and offers its sincere apologies to its business partners, shareholders, and all other relevant parties for any inconvenience or concern this may cause”. It said that it has established a committee to investigate the company’s conduct and asked some senior executives to return part of their compensation.
Even before the Tokyo Olympics began, concerns about wrongdoing had surfaced. In 2016, French authorities said they had uncovered millions of dollars of payments made by Tokyo’s Olympic organising committee to a Singaporean firm in an effort to secure the winning bid to host the Games. The ensuing scandal led the head of the national Olympic committee, Tsunekazu Takeda, to resign. Takeda has denied any wrongdoing.
In the years since, additional corruption allegations have tainted the reputations of some of Japan’s most prominent companies.
In August, prosecutors arrested top executives from the Japanese publishing giant Kadokawa and the business clothing retailer Aoki Holdings on bribery charges. A former Dentsu executive, Haruyuki Takahashi, who served on the executive board of the committee charged with organising the Tokyo Games, was also arrested. He has denied the charges against him.
In December, Aoki Holdings’ founder, Hironori Aoki, pleaded guilty to giving around $US205,000 to Takahashi. In a court appearance in February, the ex-president of the Japanese marketing company ADK admitted to paying Takahashi over $US100,000 as his company sought marketing opportunities linked to the Games.
In response to reporters’ questions about the charges, Japan’s top government spokesperson, Hirokazu Matsuno, said that the charges showed “contempt for the value of sports”.
This article originally appeared in The New York Times.
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