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Germany's Bosch will pay U.S. $36 million for shipments made to China's Huawei

The U.S. Commerce Department announced on Wednesday that Robert Bosch, a German technology company, had agreed to pay $36 Million in restitution for the shipment of over $70 Million worth of'sensor products' and'software for cell phone sytems?to Huawei.

Huawei is listed on a U.S. blacklist of companies that do not allow the sale of certain items produced abroad that use U.S. technology.

According to a settlement agreement signed between the Commerce Department, and Bosch, two?non U.S. Bosch subsidiary exported the goods and the software on more than 100 occasions between 2020 and 2024 without a licence.

Bosch stated in a statement that the violations were "unintentional".

The U.S. Justice Department has agreed to close its investigation into the matter and said it would not prosecute the company that self-reported the misconduct.

In a press release, Assistant Attorney General for National Security John A. Eisenberg stated that "this declination reflects clear benefits to companies who promptly disclose potential violations" and fully cooperate with our investigations.

Bosch has agreed to pay the Justice Department profits from transactions in question. Authorities said that the 'company' will receive credit for the Justice Department payment in the $36 Million Commerce Department settlement.

Bosch is a global technology and service company headquartered in Stuttgart. It has nearly 500 subsidiaries and will generate approximately $90 billion of revenue annually by 2024.

Bosch stated in its statement that it has enhanced its compliance program for future violations. (Reporting and editing by Karen Freifeld)

(source: Reuters)