By Daniel Tencer, Raw Story
     
      Oilfield services company Halliburton is in negotiations with the       Nigerian government to keep its former CEO, Dick Cheney, out of       prison, according to a news report.
     
      Sources inside Nigeria's Economic and Financial Crimes Commission       told GlobalPost this week that a settlement keeping the charges       against Cheney out of court could cost as much as $500 million.
     
      Nigeria filed charges against Cheney this week in an investigation       of alleged bribery estimated at $180 million. Prosecutors named       both Halliburton and KBR in the charges, as well as three European       oil and engineering companies -- Technip SA, EniSpa, and Saipem       Construction.
     
      The charges allege that engineering contractor KBR, until 2007 a       subsidiary of Halliburton, was among companies that paid bribes to       secure a $6 billion contract for a natural gas plant. KBR pleaded       guilty to the same bribes in a US court in 2009, and agreed to pay       a $382 million fine. The Nigerian charges appear to stem from the       US case -- though, in that trial, Cheney was never directly       charged.
     
      It's not clear from the GlobalPost report if the $500 million       figure refers to the amount Halliburton will have to pay, or       whether that amount would cover all the companies that have been       charged.
     
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