Folks, word on the oil patch is that back payments from vendors and contractors to Chevron employees are flowing faster than a gusher in the Permian! We're talking thousands of sneaky little envelopes stuffed with "overtime oopsies" and
"contractor compliments" enough to make your 401(k) jealous. One insider whispered it's like Christmas in July, but with more subpoenas.
And here's the kicker: maybe JUST maybe a mega federal audit is already lurking in the shadows, with IRS suits swapping briefcases for hard hats.
Chevron coughed up $30 million to the U.S. government: $25 million in disgorged profits, a $3 million SEC civil penalty, and $2 million to the Treasury’s Office of Foreign Assets Control. This was the biggest Oil for Food penalty in the U.S. at the time, and it came under the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) for improper payments.
In 2016, a federal indictment in Texas nailed two guys: a Chevron oil trader (James Potts) and a consultant (Gregory Corbitt) for a bribery scheme. Potts allegedly steered oil deals in Cameroon, Belarus, and Russia to cronies who kicked back cash via Cayman Islands accounts, fake invoices, and even straight-up cash drops. They hid it all with bogus tax returns and laundered funds through Swiss and Cayman banks. The scheme straight-up “deprived Chevron of the honest services” of its own employee, per the DOJ.
Closer to home, in 2019, Chevron sued a former Pascagoula, Mississippi refinery supervisor (Michael Matthews) for over a decade of kickbacks. He allegedly rigged contracts to buddies and contractors who paid him off with cash and favors, then approved fake invoices for ghost work pocketing the difference while sc--wing Chevron’s procurement rules.
These aren’t one offs. Chevron’s racked up $1.37 billion in penalties since 2000 across 691 violations, including environmental sc--w ups, wage theft, and more corruption probes.
IT GETS BETTTTERRRRR
20% Layoffs Amid Record Profits
In February 2025, Chevron dropped a bombshell: plans to slash 20% of its global workforce (that’s about 15,000-20,000 jobs) by the end of 2026, citing “efficiencies” in a post-merger world after swallowing Hess. This came hot on the heels of the company’s $21.4 billion profit in 2024 and ongoing billions in stock buybacks hardly a “tough times” story. Employees, many loyal for decades, got the axe to boost shareholder value, with little regard for families disrupted or communities gutted. It’s not corruption in the bribe sense, but it’s the epitome of greed: treating human talent as expendable when the balance sheet demands it. No golden parachutes for the rank-and-file, just pink slips and “thanks for the service.”
But you got some sc-m bags in here saying PDCE was the shady ones. Chevron’s overall Glassdoor rating sits at 3.8 out of 5, with only 71% of employees recommending it, and recent reviews noting a 6% drop in satisfaction over the past year often citing limited advancement opportunities,no raises well the ceo keeps getting bigger and bigger salaries, bureaucratic hurdles, and a profit driven atmosphere that prioritizes cost cutting over employee well being.
Chevron consolidated contracts with a handful of large national firms (some tied to prominent oil landowners, raising conflict of interest flags), sidelining veteran local subcontractors with 15+ years of safe service and stalling brownfield redevelopment projects that once supported families and small businesses. This shift is seen as profit-maximizing at the expense of the local economy, potentially creating monopolies, ethical lapses, and broader ripple effects like job losses for contractors and reduced industry growth.
Employees deserve better than being pawns in a profit game. We all need to stand up.