WASHINGTON, D.C. - A 43-year-old
former GSA contractor employee, Charles Anthony
Wehausen, was sentenced on Friday, October 31, 2008,
before U.S. District Judge Colleen Kollar-Kotelly to
33 months in prison to be followed by three years of
supervised release, based on his February 2008
guilty pleas to a charge of conspiracy to commit
mail fraud and a charge of income tax evasion, U.S.
Attorney Jeffrey A. Taylor, the Honorable Brian
Miller, Inspector General, U.S. General Services
Administration (GSA), Special Agent in Charge C.
Andre’ Martin, Internal Revenue Service, Criminal
Investigation, and Joseph Persichini, Jr., Assistant
Director in Charge, Washington Field Office, Federal
Bureau of Investigation, announced today.
Wehausen, 43, of Waldorf,
Maryland, was also ordered to pay restitution of
$188,941 for losses to the GSA and $55,260 for
unpaid taxes to the Internal Revenue Service. The
sentence also included an order of forfeiture in the
amount of $188,941.
According to the government’s
evidence, from 2000 through mid-2003, Wehausen was a
Chief Engineer and Project Manager at the
Washington, D.C. office of PM Services, Inc., a
building maintenance services company, headquartered
in St. Petersburg, Florida, which at that time
provided building maintenance services for the GSA
at the Federal Cohen Building, 330 Independence
Avenue, SW, Washington, D.C., and the Federal
Switzer Building, 330 C Street, SW, Washington, D.C.
Wehausen’s job duties included locating
subcontractors to perform more extensive mechanical
work outside of the routine maintenance handled by
PM Services. He was also responsible for preparing
the paperwork necessary to hire and pay the
subcontractors. After paying subcontractors for
their work, PM Services would obtain reimbursement
from GSA.
Wehausen conspired with four
subcontractors to artificially and fraudulently
inflate job costs listed in purchase orders and
invoices. These fraudulent documents were sent to PM
Services headquarters in St. Petersburg, where
company officials there unwittingly sent excess
payments to the subcontractors. The subcontractors,
in turn, gave a portion of the excess payments to
Wehausen as kickback payments. The total amount of
fraudulent payments as a result of the conspiracy
was approximately $384,500, a loss suffered by the
GSA. Wehausen also evaded the reporting and payment
of Federal income taxes on the payments he received
from the subcontractors, resulting in losses to the
taxpaying public of $55,260.
Prior to this sentencing,
Wehausen’s four co-conspirators pleaded guilty to
conspiracy charges and were all sentenced by Judge
Kollar-Kotelly. They are:
(1) Rene Lillicotch, 50, of
Manassas, Virginia, who was an operator of Precision
Mechanical Services, a company specializing in
commercial mechanical services. On August 7, 2008,
Lillicotch was sentenced to 60 days in jail to be
served on consecutive weekends, to be followed by
120 days of home confinement as part of 5 years
probation. Lillicotch was also ordered to pay
restitution to the United States in the amount
$84,333. This sentence was based on Lillicotch’s
July 25, 2007, guilty plea to one count of
conspiracy to commit mail fraud. As part of his
guilty plea, Lillicotch admitted that from December
2000 through July of 2003, he participated in the
conspiracy by creating and submitting fraudulently
inflated invoices and by paying kickbacks totaling
over $175,000.
(2) Bahram Shahriari, 46, of
Vienna, Virginia, who was the owner of Applied Power
Group, a company providing heating, ventilating and
air conditioning equipment and technical support. On
July 10, 2008, Shahriari was sentenced to 6 months
of home detention as part of 5 years probation.
Shahriari was also ordered to pay restitution to the
United States in the amount of $58,590 and fine of
$3,000. This sentence was based on Shahriari’s July
12, 2007, guilty plea to one count of conspiracy to
commit mail fraud. As part of his guilty plea,
Shahriari admitted that from June 2001 through July
2003, he participated in the conspiracy by working
with Wehausen to create and submit fraudulently
inflated invoices and by paying kickbacks to
Wehausen of over $80,000.
(3) James Baker, 42, of New
Windsor, Maryland, who was the owner of Air
Specialties, a commercial mechanical services
company. On June 26, 2008, Baker was sentenced to 5
years of probation and ordered to pay restitution to
the United States in the amount of $32,728 and a
fine of $2,000. This sentence was based on Baker’s
November 28, 2007, guilty plea to one count of
conspiracy to commit mail fraud. As part of his
guilty plea, Baker admitted that from October 2001
through July 2003, he participated in the conspiracy
by working with Wehausen to create and submit
fraudulently inflated invoices and by paying
kickbacks to Wehausen totaling over $65,000.
(4) Craig Anderson, 49, of La
Plata, Maryland, who was the operator of CA
Anderson, a company specializing in mechanical
insulation work.
On July 22, 2008, Anderson was
sentenced to 4 months of home detention as part of 5
years probation. Anderson was also ordered to pay
restitution to the United States in the amount of
$23,291.
As part of his guilty plea,
Anderson admitted that from March 2001 through July
2003, he participated in a conspiracy by working
with Wehausen to create and submit fraudulently
inflated invoices and by paying kickbacks to
Wehausen. The kickbacks totaled over $46,500.
"Honest services are what the
public expects and deserves from its government,"
said U.S. Attorney Taylor. "Working together, the
law enforcement agencies assigned to this matter did
an outstanding job in uncovering an extensive scheme
designed to rob the taxpaying public of needed
government operating funds and in bringing to
justice those persons responsible for this corrosive
criminal behavior."
"These five conspirators
overcharged the government and meticulously divided
up the proceeds, turning over a large share to
Wehausen. The Federal agents successfully penetrated
the wall of silence that surrounds criminal
conspiracies and the murky world of kickbacks and
fraud," stated GSA Inspector General Miller.
"Prosecuting individuals who
intentionally conceal income and evade taxes is a
vital element in maintaining public confidence in
our tax system. Tax evasion is not a victimless
crime. Honest, hardworking Americans pay the price
when others choose to evade their tax obligations,"
stated IRS Special Agent in Charge Martin.
In announcing the sentences, U.S.
Attorney Taylor, GSA Inspector General Miller, IRS
Special Agent in Charge Martin, and FBI Assistant
Director in Charge Perschicini commended the
cooperative investigation by Special Agent Gordon
Cummings of the GSA Inspector General’s Office,
Special Agent James Greczek, of the IRS, Criminal
Investigation Division, Special Agents Daniel Damron
and John Longmire of the FBI, U.S. Attorney’s Office
Auditor Robert Jodoin, Legal Assistants Teesha
Tobias and Lisa Robinson, and Assistant U.S.
Attorneys John Griffith, Diane Lucas and Sarah
Chasson.