To
Date, 19 Individuals Have Pleaded Guilty or Been Convicted at Trial in Ongoing
Corruption Investigation
WASHINGTON – A federal jury in Elkins,
W. Va., convicted Richard Evick, a U.S. Army Sergeant First Class and
Non-Commissioned Officer in charge of contracting at a U.S. military base in
Kuwait, and his associate, Crystal Martin, of all counts with which they were
charged in connection with a bribery and money laundering scheme related to
defense contracts awarded in support of Operation Iraqi Freedom, announced
Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal
Division and U.S. Attorney William J. Ihlenfeld II for the Northern District of
West Virginia.
Evick was found guilty yesterday of one count
of bribery conspiracy, two counts of bribery, one count of money laundering
conspiracy, six counts of money laundering and one count of obstructing an
agency proceeding. Martin was found
guilty of one count of bribery conspiracy, one count of money laundering
conspiracy and four counts of money laundering.
“As the highest ranking enlisted officer in
the U.S. Army’s contracting office at Camp Arifjan in Kuwait, Mr. Evick had a
special duty to strike deals in the best interests of the American people,”
said Assistant Attorney General Breuer.
“Instead, he steered business to dirty contractors in exchange for tens
of thousands of dollars in cash and other items. Mr. Evick, Ms. Martin and their
co-conspirators defrauded the government they had sworn to serve. To date, our investigation has led to the convictions
of 19 individuals, and we will continue aggressively to pursue corruption and
procurement fraud wherever we find it.”
“The investigation and prosecution of public
corruption cases continues to be a top priority for the Department of Justice
in West Virginia and throughout the country,” said U.S. Attorney Ihlenfeld. “Fortunately the vast majority of our public
officials are honest and trustworthy, but those who are not will be held
accountable.”
Evick served as the U.S. Army’s Non-Commission
Officer in charge of contracting at Camp Arifjan between 2005 and 2006. In that capacity, Evick had the authority to
arrange for the award of valuable contracts to supply the U.S. military with
bottled water and catering services, maintain Army barracks and install
security barriers, among other things.
Evidence presented at trial demonstrated that
Evick and his co-conspirators manipulated the contracting process in several
ways, including disclosing confidential information about the U.S. military’s
plans to procure goods and services and accepting fake bids. In this manner, Evick and two of his fellow
contacting officials, former Army Majors James Momon and Chris Murray, steered
nearly $24 million worth of contracting business to certain contractors. In exchange, these contractors paid Evick
more than $170,000 in bribes, a free New Year’s Eve trip to Dubai and parties.
Among the persons who paid Evick these bribes
was Wajdi Birjas, a civilian U.S. government employee at Camp Arifjan who had a
secret interest in a military contractor operating in Kuwait. Birjas testified that he provided phony bids
to Evick from purportedly independent contractors who were, in reality,
controlled by the same individuals. The
evidence showed that Evick used these bids to create the false impression that
the contracts were awarded according to Army contracting rules providing for a
competitive bidding process. Birjas also
testified that he had a hidden safe at his villa where Momon stored more than
$800,000 in bribe money and which Evick used to exchange a large amount of
Kuwaiti currency for U.S. dollars.
According to the evidence, Evick gave much of
his bribe money to Martin, who had a concession from the Army and Air force
Exchange Service to sell merchandise at Camp Arifjan, which was primarily a
cash business. Evick and Martin then
transferred tens of thousands of dollars worth of Evick’s bribe money to the
U.S. into the hands of Evick’s wife and his girlfriend. The evidence showed that, in order to conceal
the fact that this was bribe money, Evick and Martin converted the money into
Western Union wires, money orders, cashiers checks and personal checks. Evick and Martin also smuggled cash into the
U.S. on their persons, Martin often taking military transport flights to avoid
customs screening. Evick used his bribe
money, among other things, to purchase and construct a residence on three and
one half acres in Parsons, W. Va., and to buy a pickup truck.
The evidence showed that Evick and Martin also
participated in a scheme to smuggle $250,000 of bribe money belonging to Momon
into the U.S. Momon testified about a
summer 2006 meeting at Kuwait international airport with Evick and Martin, at
which Martin described how she was laundering Evick’s bribe money and offered
to provide the same service for Momon.
According to evidence presented at trial, Evick offered to bury Momon’s
money on Evick’s West Virginia property.
When law enforcement agents interviewed Evick several months later about
corruption at Camp Arifjan, Evick falsely stated that he did not know the
contractor from whom evidence showed he had received a $150,000 bribe, among
other things.
“Contingency contracting provides an
opportunity for honest contractors to excel but still runs the inherent risk of
fraudulent activity that plagues all government contracting,” said Special
Agent in Charge Robert Craig of the Defense Criminal Investigative
Service. “While our service members and
defense civilians expect the best from their supporting contracts, we root out
the worst and, working alongside our law enforcement partners, continue to
aggressively bring those who defraud our nation’s warfighters to justice.”
“We are very pleased with the guilty verdicts
in this case,” said Frank Robey, the director of the U.S. Army Criminal
Investigation Command’s Major Procurement Fraud Unit. “It is a warning to anyone, in or out of
uniform, who attempts to defraud the Army or the government that we will
investigate credible allegations and bring those responsible to justice. Our agents have done a remarkable job
investigating this case along with our fellow law enforcement partners and the
DOJ.”
“The fact that a jury convicted these two
individuals on all 11 counts stands as a powerful reminder that those who break the public trust to engage in
bribery and money laundering with funds meant for the reconstruction of Iraq
will face the full force of the law,” said Stuart W. Bowen, Special Inspector
General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR).
“SIGIR and those who work with us will continue work on those cases
still open against those involved in illegal acts.”
Evick and Martin face a maximum sentence of
five years in prison for bribery conspiracy, 20 years in prison for money
laundering conspiracy and 20 years in prison for each count of money
laundering. Evick also faces a maximum
of 15 years in prison for each count of bribery, five years for obstructing an
agency proceeding and the forfeiture of the proceeds of his bribe scheme, which
includes his West Virginia residence.
They also face maximum fines of $250,000 per count. They will be sentenced by Chief U.S. District
Judge John Preston Bailey. Their
sentencing date has not yet been scheduled.
The case against Evick and Martin arose from a
corruption probe focusing on the contracting office at Camp Arifjan, a U.S.
military base in Kuwait. As a result of
this investigation, 19 individuals, including Evick and Martin, have pleaded
guilty or been found guilty at trial for their roles in the scheme. Momon pleaded guilty in August 2009 to
receiving approximately $1.6 million in bribes and agreed to pay $5.7 million
in restitution, and he is awaiting sentencing.
Murray pleaded guilty in January 2009 for his role in the scheme and was
sentenced in December 2009 to 57 months in prison. Birjas pleaded guilty in September 2010 and
he is awaiting sentencing.
The
case is being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys Peter C. Sprung, Eric G. Olshan,
Timothy J. Kelly and Edward J. Loya Jr. of the Criminal Division’s Public
Integrity Section, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Andrew R. Cogar of the U.S.
Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of West Virginia. The case is being investigated by special
agents of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the Army Criminal
Investigation Command Division, Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation,
the FBI and SIGIR.
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