Title: United States Department of Transportation
1United States Department of Transportation Office
of Inspector General
United States Department of Labor Office of
Labor Racketeering and Fraud Investigations
2Multi-Agency Investigation
- United States Attorneys Office
- Eastern District of New York
- Chief and Deputy Chief of Public Integrity
Division - US DOT/OIG
- US DOL/OIG
- Port Authority of New York New Jersey OIG
- New York City Department of Investigation
3CASE OVERVIEW
Investigative Techniques
Judicial Actions
- Allegations
- Multi-target investigation
- Enforcement Actions
- Search Warrants
- Arrest Warrants
- Interviews
- Cooperation provides information against other
potential targets - Document analysis
- Search Warrant Materials
- Computer forensics
- Recorded Conversations
- Indictments/Informations
- Trial
- Convictions
- Sentencings
4SubcontractorCase Summary
- Allegations of employee kickbacks
- Owners required employees to kickback a
percentage of paycheck, on public works projects. - Allegations of prevailing wage fraud
- Participation in Contractors Benefits Trust (CBT)
- Company would contribute supplemental benefits or
fringe benefits to CBT for non-union workers than
remit payment from CBT to union members locals
to pay for the union members benefits.
5Investigative Techniques(Subcontractor)
- SW executed at the office of the subcontractor
- Interviews of employees
- Interviews with the Subcontractor
- VP and part owner of the subcontracting company
- Admits to kickback scheme
- Admits to destruction of evidence
- Admits to payoffs to an Executive of a General
Contracting Company - Admits to prevailing wage fraud scheme with a
Labor Law Attorney - Bookkeeper of the subcontracting company
- Corroborates VPs admissions and provides
further cooperation
6Subcontractor(Cooperation)
Allegations
Allegations
- Executive of General Contracting Company
- Requested 5 kickbacks on all of the
subcontracting companys requisitions to the GC,
in exchange for expedited payments and future
subcontracts. - Executive received approximately 180,000 in cash
payoffs. -
- Labor Lawyer
- In recorded conversation lawyer admits to the
inappropriate use of CBT. - Instructs subcontractor to destroy information on
a USB device after being advised that device
contained information about the fraudulent CBT
transactions.
7Subcontractor(Cooperation)
- Cooperating subcontractor consents to concealed
recordings with Executive. - Multiple in person meetings were conducted
- Conversations were recorded by LEOs
- Use of confidential funds
- Arrest warrant issued for the Executive
- 18 USC 1341 (Mail Fraud)
- Alleges approximately 180,000 in kickbacks
8Executive of General Contracting
Company(Cooperation)
- Executive and defense atty. agree to meet with
the USAO and agents - VP admits to scheme (5 kickbacks from
subcontracting company) - Enters into a cooperation agreement with USAO
- Provides information against NYC DOT official
- Agrees to wear a body wire and make recorded
telephone calls.
9Executive - GC(Cooperation)
Allegation
Allegation
- New York City Department of Transportation
- Assistant Civil Engineer
- (NYC DOT Employee)
- Requested Macys gift cards and cash, in exchange
for expedited payments to GC and NYC DOT permits. - NYC DOT employee received approximately 10,500
in cash payments for NYC DOT permits. - Approximately 100,000 was solicited by Employee
in exchange for favorably negotiating settlement
of approx. 16 million dollar claim. -
- New York City Department of Transportation
- Director of Movable Bridges
- (NYC DOT Director)
- One of the approving officials for NYC DOT
necessary for the sign off of the approx. 16
million claim. - Requested approximately 500,000 to favorably
negotiate settlement for Executive.
10Executive(Cooperation)
- Cooperating Executive consents to concealed
recordings with both NYC DOT employees - Multiple in person meetings were conducted
- Conversations were recorded by Law Enforcement
- Use of confidential funds
- 17,000 NYC DOT employee
- 10,000 Director
- Arrest warrants issued for both
- 18 USC 666 (Bribery)
- Alleged 400,000 in bribery
11GLOBAL CLAIM
- The Corporation submitted a claim for 16,500,000
to the City of New York. - Payment of change orders
- Milestones
- Although the Claim had been filed the parties
were still free to negotiate. - The Executive had multiple meetings with both the
Director and the Employee during which they
discussed reaching a settlement of the Claim that
would appear legitimate to NYC/DOT but, in fact,
would result in a significant payoff to both the
Director and the Employee.
12Bribery Scheme
- Quid pro quo 18 USC 666
- Agreed the Executive would pay the Director an
amount equal to 10 of any settlement amount
exceeding 2,500,000. - The Director also promised that he could work
behind the scenes and guarantee a negotiated
settlement of between 6.5 million and 6.6
million, in exchange for a bribery payment in
excess of 525,000. - Director gave the Executive details about the
Citys negotiating position and coached how to
handle the settlement negotiations. During the
course of the scheme, the Director accepted two
cash payoffs totaling 60,000.
13(No Transcript)
14Undercover Meetings
- Continued behind the scene work
- DOT meetings
- 10,000 initial payment to Director
- 5000 payment to Employee
Conversation 2 - Dubai
Conversation 1 - 10,000
155000 CASH PAYOFF
XXXXX
16(No Transcript)
17Final Payment
- 50,000 payment
- Director continues to increase his bribe
- Provides Executive with instruction on the wire
transfer to Dubai. - Provides a fake invoice for 200,000 in
merchandise with routing information to an
account in Dubai.
18(No Transcript)
19(No Transcript)
20RESULTS
- Director Employee
- November 27, 2007 Arrested
- 18 USC 666 Federal Bribery
- March 24, 2008 Pled Guilty
- 18 USC 666
- January 23, 2009 Sentenced
- Director 12 months and One Day in jail
- Employee 36 months in jail
21CONTRACTORS BENEFIT TRUST (CBT)
- Labor Lawyer Sole Trustee
- Provides Health and Welfare Benefits pursuant to
the Davis-Bacon Act (40 USC 226a), Little Davis
Bacon (NY Labor Law Section 220), for prevailing
wage workers. - Benefit bank for CBT client-contractors to
appear to show compliance with prevailing wage
requirements to state agencies. - CBT accepts fringe benefit contributions pursuant
to participation agreements with contractors to
benefit both unionized (business friendly)
and/or non-unionized workers - CBT is a vehicle to get 2 for 1 dollars worth
of prevailing wages back into the hands of the
contractor officials/owners - CBT assets are used to purchase benefits for
non-prevailing wage workers. - Owner
- Office Staff
22CONTRACTORS BENEFIT TRUST (CBT)
- Recorded quotes from the Labor Lawyer
- ..you wanna show the DA or whoever else is
looking, Yeah, we got a, we got a set policy and
people, whoever qualifies, they get it. So you
gotta spend some money to make it look good. You
know? The, the pig theory, you know the pig
theory? Pigs get eaten, but hogs get
slaughtered. - So if they get to the end and they say, You
know, whatever it is hes doing, we cant figure
it out.Thats not criminal if they cant figure
it out. - We will do it, well put the money in the
trust just so you can sleep at night. But I
gotta tell you, two years from now youre going
to say, You know, we could have got away with
it. - Its going to look fishy,what Im afraid
of is the report. Cause once theres a piece of
paper that says Im contributing extra for
such-and-such a job, now thats an admission.
Youre saying you didnt do it right the first
time. -
23INVESTIGATION RESULTS
- Eight Search Warrants
- Four Arrest Warrants
- Seven Guilty Pleas
- 98,000 Confidential funds used for payoffs
- 143 monitored telephonic conversations
- 38 monitored in person meetings
- Approximately 32 hours of conversation
- Approx. 7 million in restitution/forfeiture
- 67,000 in fines
- 78 months Incarceration
- 168 months Probation/Supervised release
- 200 hours community service
- Three resignations from public service
-
24QUESTIONS??????
25CONTACT INFORMATION
US DOT/OIG
Special Agent Robert Stanek (212) 337-1363
US DOL/OIG
Special Agent Joseph Dellapenna (646) 264-3557