A former U.S. civilian contractor was
sentenced today to 24 months in prison for conspiring to steal military
generators in Iraq and selling them on the black market, announced Assistant
Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division
and U.S. Attorney Thomas G. Walker for the Eastern District of North Carolina.
David John Welch, 36, of Hope Mills, N.C., was
sentenced by U.S. District Judge W. Earl Britt in the Eastern District of North
Carolina. Welch was also sentenced to
three years of supervised release following his prison term and was ordered to
pay $160,000 in restitution to the Department of Defense. Welch pleaded guilty on April 2, 2012, to a
criminal information charging him with conspiracy to steal property under the
control of a government contractor.
According to court documents and information
presented at his plea hearing, Welch was the operations and maintenance manager
of a U.S. government contractor on Victory Base Complex in Baghdad. In this capacity, Welch had the ability to
influence the distribution and movement of military equipment as well as U.S.
government equipment. In addition, Welch
was in charge of overseeing the movement of generators from the compound to the
Defense Reutilization & Marketing Office (DRMO). In October 2011, Welch and a co-conspirator
entered into a scheme to steal and later sell approximately 38 generators on
the black market in Iraq to unknown co-conspirators by diverting these
generators from the DRMO to an undisclosed location off-base in Iraq. After the generators were stolen from the
compound, Welch’s co-conspirator provided him with four stacks of $100 bills,
totaling approximately $38,600.
This case is being prosecuted by Special Trial
Attorney Mark Grider of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section, on detail from
Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction (SIGIR), with assistance from
Assistant U.S. Attorney Banumathi Rangarajan of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for
the Eastern District of North Carolina.
The case is being investigated by the FBI, SIGIR and the Major
Procurement Fraud Unit of the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command.
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