During the 2000s, he became marketing and sales director in the boiler division of Alstom, a large French transportation and energy company.[5]
Imprisonment in the United States
Alstom attracted US jurisdiction by virtue of the fact that it was a US "Issuer" (basically, that it had some involvement as an issuer on US securities markets). Pierucci was subject to the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) because he was vice-president of Global Sales at a Connecticut-based subsidiary of Alstom.[6]
In 2010, the DOJ opened an investigation into Alstom's commercial practices, focusing, in particular, on a 2003 deal in Indonesia worth US$118 million.[7] Alstom initially seemed to cooperate with the DOJ proceedings, but later refused to cooperate for several years.[8][9]
On 13 April 2013, Frédéric Pierucci was arrested and accused of bribery of foreign public officials and conspiracy to bribe.[10] More specifically, he was accused of being instrumental in hiring consultants who were used to channel bribes to members of the Indonesian parliament and to officials of the state-owned electricity company in order to obtain a contract to provide power-related services.[6][non-primary source needed]
Immediately upon his arrest, he was invited to become an FBI informant inside Alstom, an offer which he refused. He was subsequently kept in custody and denied release on bail.[11][time needed][12]
He was fired from Alstom on 20 September 2013.[12][13]
He spent 14 months in high-security prison facilities while awaiting trial.[14] He was eventually able to secure bail after American friends provided guarantees. In September 2017, a Connecticut court condemned Pierucci to two years and a half in jail, including time spent awaiting trial.[15] He was released in September 2018.[16]
Aftermath
In April 2014, Pierucci learned that the energy section of Alstom was sold to the American company General Electric. This led him to conclude that his arrest, denial of bail, and continued imprisonment were part of a strategy of economic warfare and hostage diplomacy. He described himself as an "economic hostage".[15][2] He eventually co-wrote a book about his experience, The American Trap.[17]France Inter adapted the book as a radio show and podcast.[2]
Media organisations in France reported that the sequence of events corresponded to a successful use of hostage diplomacy by the United States against France.[2][18] The satirical French newspaper Le Canard enchaîné asked why the same case was not handled by France's law enforcement authorities, since the criminal acts at issue are also illegal there.[19]
In 2020, Frédéric Pierucci tried to organise French investors to buy back Alstom's former nuclear energy assets from General Electric.[20] Arnaud Montebourg suggests the French government should lead the effort for strategic reasons.[21]