FATHER AND
SON INDICTED IN FRAUD SCHEME FOR CLAIMING FALSE
LABOR COSTS UNDER NAVY CONTRACT
Indictment Seeks
Forfeiture of $207,860
Greenbelt,
Maryland - A federal grand jury indicted
Nicholas Baroni, age 62, and his son, Keith
Baroni, age 38, both of Kenner, Louisiana, today
for mail fraud and false claims in connection
with a government contract, announced United
States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod
J. Rosenstein.
According to the 15-count indictment, Nicholas
Baroni was president and Keith Baroni was vice
president and secretary-treasurer of Urban
Planning and Innovations (UPI), a civil
engineering, urban regional planning and
information technology business located in
Kenner, Louisiana. UPI was awarded a subcontract
on May 2, 2001 to provide technical support for
a project to create an electronic database of
the parts for several Navy and U.S. Marine Corps
helicopters. The subcontract was part of a
larger competitive procurement contract to
provide technical and management logistics
support services for the Naval Air Systems
Command at the Patuxent River Naval Air Station
in St. Mary�s County, Maryland. The
subcontract was a cost plus award fee agreement
that allowed UPI to be compensated by submitting
payment vouchers for their labor costs.
The
indictment alleges that from May through
December 2001, the defendants caused UPI to
submit invoices to the Navy by mail that
contained fraudulent labor costs. Specifically,
the indictment charges that the Baronis
instructed a UPI employee to charge all of her
time to the Navy contract even when she was
doing jobs not related to the contract; that the
Baronis engaged in business wholly unrelated to
the Navy contract and charged that time to the
Navy contract; and that the Baronis submitted
time sheets to the Navy indicating that they had
performed hundreds of hours of work on the Navy
contract under the job category of Systems
Administrator, when in fact, neither was
qualified to perform work as a Systems
Administrator and had not performed such work.
The
indictment further alleges that when a Defense
Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) auditor performed
an on-site visit at UPI, Keith Baroni instructed
a UPI employee to place folders related to the
Navy contract on the desks of several UPI
employees to make it appear that
those employees
were working on the Navy contract. He
instructed other employees to falsely advise the
auditor that they were working on the Navy
contract. During a later visit conducted by a
DCAA auditor, Nicholas Baroni walked around the
UPI office carrying computer equipment to give
the appearance that he was performing the job of
a Systems Administrator on the Navy contract.
The
indictment seeks forfeiture of $207,860. The
defendants face a maximum sentence of 20 years
in prison followed by three years of supervised
release for mail fraud; and five years in
prison, followed by three years of supervised
release for false claims. No court appearances
have yet been scheduled.
An
indictment is not a finding of guilt. An
individual charged by indictment is presumed
innocent unless and until proven guilty at some
later criminal proceedings.
In
October 2006, Deputy Attorney General Paul J.
McNulty announced the formation of a National
Procurement Fraud Task Force designed to promote
the early detection, identification, prevention
and prosecution of procurement fraud associated
with the increase in government contracting
activity for national security and other
government programs. The Procurement Fraud Task
Force - chaired by Assistant Attorney General
Alice S. Fisher for the Criminal Division -
includes the United States Attorneys� Offices,
the FBI, the U.S. Inspectors General community,
and a number of other federal law enforcement
agencies. This case, as well as other cases
brought by members of the Task Force,
demonstrate the Department of Justice�s
commitment to helping ensure the integrity of
the government procurement process.
United
States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein praised the
investigative work performed by the Naval
Criminal Investigative Service. Mr. Rosenstein
thanked Assistant U.S. Attorney Bryan E.
Foreman, who is prosecuting the case.