By Robb M. Stewart 

MELBOURNE, Australia--Australian police have charged a former executive at the nation's largest bank with bribery, alleging he and a colleague illegally received payments in return for giving a lucrative contract to a U.S.-based technology company.

Keith Hunter, formerly an executive general manager in Commonwealth Bank of Australia Ltd.'s IT department, was charged with two counts of bribery in a Sydney court early Wednesday. Mr. Hunter's lawyer, Brian Wrench, confirmed the accused had been granted bail and had pleaded not guilty. Mr. Hunter had elected to remain in Australia to face the charges, Mr. Wrench told The Wall Street Journal. Mr. Hunter, who was ordered to surrender his passport, couldn't be reached for comment.

New South Wales police said they wanted to speak with a second man who isn't in the country, Jon Waldron, who had also been a senior IT manager at Commonwealth Bank, the country's biggest lender by assets. Mr. Waldron couldn't be immediately reached for comment and it wasn't clear if he had legal counsel.

The bank didn't confirm the names of the suspects.

The police allege the two men, both U.S. nationals, received almost US$2.2 million in bribes last year as part of an earlier deal to help a small technology company, ServiceMesh, secure a contract with the bank to provide products and services worth tens of millions of dollars.

ServiceMesh was acquired by Falls Church, Va.-based Computer Sciences Corp. in late 2013. The police say the size of the contract with Commonwealth Bank would have contributed significantly to the undisclosed purchase price.

The contract between ServiceMesh and Commonwealth Bank wasn't put out to public tender, and the bank's policy states employees can't receive cash or gifts from suppliers, the police said.

The police allege that Eric Pulier, previously ServiceMesh's chairman and chief executive and now vice president and general manager of CSC's global cloud unit, rewarded the two former bank executives with cash payments.

Mr. Pulier wasn't immediately reachable for comment in the U.S., and it wasn't clear if he had legal counsel.

A spokeswoman for CSC said the company had begun its own investigation into the allegations. "We take this matter very seriously and will cooperate fully with all relevant authorities," she said in an emailed reply to questions.

The spokeswoman had no further comment and wouldn't confirm the name of the suspect.

According to the police, the money was transferred from accounts in the name of an individual and a company registered in Delaware and listed as a charitable organization.

Commonwealth Bank confirmed that a former executive had appeared before a Sydney court Wednesday. "We have no tolerance for any illegal activity by any employee and we take every situation seriously," a spokeswoman for the bank said, adding that no customers had been affected by the matter.

Working with the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation, the New South Wales police said its fraud and cybercrime squad had frozen more than US$1.5 million in alleged corrupt payments during the still ongoing investigation, dubbed Strike Force Drawl.

The police said they were alerted to the alleged misconduct early this year by the bank following an internal investigation that had uncovered suspicious payments to two of its employees, both U.S. nationals.

Commonwealth Bank reported to authorities that an anomalous amount of money had been paid into an account with the bank held by one of the two accused, paid in U.S. dollars, which prompted an internal investigation, according to the police.

Mr. Hunter, 61, was arrested Tuesday at a residence in Sydney's Surry Hills suburb, the police said. Commonwealth Bank confirmed it had reported the matter to the police and was cooperating with the investigation. The spokeswoman declined to comment further while the matter was before the court.

Police detectives said it would be argued in court that both former employees were involved in a corrupt relationship with the U.S.-based technology company.

They allege that evidence, including money transfers and email correspondence, will show the men received cash payments that they attempted to disguise as being from a not-for-profit organization, and that shell companies were used to launder the funds.

Write to Robb M. Stewart at robb.stewart@wsj.com

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