A
Pennsylvania Company and Two New York Companies Sentenced to Pay a Total of $3
Million in Criminal Fines
WASHINGTON—Two individuals and three
corporations were sentenced in the U.S. District Court in Manhattan by Judge
George B. Daniels today to serve time in prison and to pay criminal fines for
their participation in an eight-year conspiracy involving kickbacks in excess
of $2.3 million to defraud New York Presbyterian Hospital (NYPH), the
Department of Justice announced. The individuals and the corporations were
convicted after a four-week trial in February 2012.
Michael Yaron, the owner of two of the
companies convicted for their roles in the conspiracy—Cambridge Environmental
& Construction Corp, doing business as National Environmental Associates
(Cambridge/NEA), and Oxford Construction & Development Corp.—was sentenced
to serve 60 months in jail and to pay a $500,000 criminal fine. Cambridge/NEA
and Oxford Construction were each sentenced to pay a $1 million criminal fine.
Moshe Buchnik, the president of an
asbestos abatement company that also did business at NYPH, was sentenced to
serve 48 months in jail and to pay a $500,000 criminal fine for his role in the
conspiracy.
Artech Corp., a company owned by a
relative of Santo Saglimbeni, a former vice president of facilities operations
at NYPH, was also sentenced to pay a $1 million criminal fine.
Two additional charged co-conspirators,
Saglimbeni and Emilio “Tony” Figueroa, a former director of facilities
operations at NYPH, who were convicted along with Yaron, Buchnick,
Cambridge/NEA, Oxford Construction, and Artech, are scheduled to appear in
court on July 31, 2012.
“The sentences imposed today are
consistent with the seriousness of the crimes for which the individuals and
companies were found guilty,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Joseph Wayland
in charge of the Department of Justice’s Antitrust Division. “Today’s sentences
hold accountable the unlawful conduct of those involved in illegal kickback
conspiracies.”
The department said the scheme to
defraud NYPH centered on Saglimbeni, who, with the assistance of Figueroa,
awarded asbestos abatement, air monitoring, and general construction contracts
to Yaron, Buchnik, and their companies in return for more than $2.3 million in
kickbacks. The kickbacks were funneled by Yaron to Saglimbeni through Artech
Corp., a sham company Saglimbeni created in his mother’s name in order to
conceal the kickbacks.
Yaron, Buchnik, Saglimbeni, Figueroa,
Cambridge/NEA, Oxford Construction, and Artech were each convicted of
conspiracy to defraud NYPH. Additionally, Yaron, his companies, Buchnik,
Saglimbeni, and Artech were also convicted of a substantive wire fraud violation.
The sentences announced today resulted
from a federal antitrust investigation of bid rigging, fraud, bribery, and
tax-related offenses in the award of construction, maintenance, and service
contracts to the facilities operations department of NYPH. Including today’s
sentencings, 14 individuals and six companies have been convicted of or pleaded
guilty to charges arising out of this investigation.
The investigation was conducted by the
Antitrust Division’s New York Field Office with the assistance of the FBI and
the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation’s New York Field Office.
Anyone with information concerning bid rigging, bribery, tax offenses, or fraud
at NYPH should contact the Antitrust Division’s New York Field Office of the at
212-335-8000, visit www.justice.gov/atr/contact/newcase.htm, or contact the
FBI’s New York Division at 212-384-1000.
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