WASHINGTON – A Miami-based ship surveyor
was sentenced today for lying to the Coast Guard and for falsely certifying
that inspections had been performed on two ships, which were designed to ensure
that the ships were seaworthy and did not pose a threat to the crew or the marine
environment, announced Ignacia S. Moreno, Assistant Attorney General for the
Environment and Natural Resources Division at the Department of Justice,
Wifredo A. Ferrer, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, Rear
Admiral William D. Baumgartner, 7th Coast Guard District Commander, and
Jonathan Sall, U.S. Coast Guard Investigative Service Special Agent in
Charge.
Alejandro Gonzalez, 60, of Miami-Dade
County, Fla., was sentenced in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of
Florida to 21 months in prison.
On May 24, 2012, a federal jury found Gonzalez
guilty of lying to a Coast Guard inspector and a federal agent about the
drydocking of the M/V Cala Galdana, a 68-meter cargo vessel, in San Juan,
Puerto Rico, in April 2009 and December 2009.
Coast Guard inspectors in San Juan discovered
the vessel taking on water in August of 2008 and requested the last drydocking
of the vessel. Gonzalez concocted a
false story about the vessel being drydocked in Colombia in 2006 when he knew
it was not. Gonzalez repeatedly claimed
the vessel had been drydocked in
Cartegena, Colombia, in March of 2006, while evidence at the trial proved
conclusively that the vessel was never in Colombia during 2006.
Gonzalez was also convicted of falsifying
documents for the M/V Cosette, a 92-meter cargo vessel. As the surveyor on behalf of Bolivia,
Gonzalez certified the ship as safe for sea while the vessel was docked in Fort
Pierce, Fla., in November 2009. When the
vessel shortly thereafter arrived in New York City harbor, Coast Guard
inspectors discovered exhaust and fuel pouring into the engine room,
endangering the crew and the ship. For
his action, Gonzalez was convicted of making a false statement and obstructing
a Coast Guard Port State Control examination.
“Mr. Gonzalez is being held accountable today
for making false statements and certifications to Coast Guard inspectors whose
job it is to ensure the safety of ships at sea,” said Assistant Attorney
General Moreno. “Ship surveyors serve a
crucial public safety role, and when they abdicate their responsibility they
put mariners in danger and our nation's waters at risk of contamination. Mr. Gonzalez's prosecution should send a
message that we will not tolerate this type of egregious behavior.”
“Surveyors are responsible for the safety of
the ships they inspect. When they fail
to do their jobs properly, lives are put at risk,” said U.S. Attorney Ferrer. “Today’s sentence should remind those few
surveyors who need reminding of the great responsibility that they carry and
the consequences of their actions.”
The prosecution was handled by Assistant U.S.
Attorney Jaime Raich and Trial Attorney Kenneth Nelson, of the Environmental
Crimes Section of the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources
Division.
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