Cary Hudson, a former financial administrator for the U.S.
Bureau of Prisons (BOP) in Carswell, Texas, has agreed to pay the United States
$50,000 to resolve allegations that he violated the Anti-Kickback Act by
accepting improper payments from Mansfield, Texas-based Integrated Medical
Solutions Inc. (IMS) in exchange for his assistance in obtaining BOP
contracts. In May 2017, IMS and its
former president, Jerry Heftler, agreed to pay more than $2.4 million to
resolve their civil liability arising from the alleged scheme.
“This settlement demonstrates that the Department of Justice
is committed to protecting the integrity of the federal contracting process
from unscrupulous contractors,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad A.
Readler of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “Improper financial arrangements between
government officials and private contractors corrupt taxpayer-funded
contracts.”
The settlement announced yesterday resolves allegations that
Hudson, while serving as a BOP financial administrator, accepted payments from
IMS in exchange for providing favorable treatment in connection with BOP
contracts to manage healthcare networks that provided medical care to federal
inmates. Hudson’s assistance to IMS
allegedly included the provision of certain confidential, non-public
information that gave IMS an unfair competitive advantage in the bidding
process. The government also alleged
that, after IMS obtained the contracts with BOP, Hudson improperly assisted IMS
in its performance of the contracts while simultaneously serving as a BOP
financial administrator.
“This case, in which our office both criminally prosecuted
the responsible employee and civilly recovered almost $2.5 million for the
federal fisc, should serve as an example and warning to others who might be
similarly tempted to abuse positions of trust in federal programs funded with
taxpayer dollars,” said U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox of the Northern District
of Texas.
In October 2014, Hudson pleaded guilty to a felony violation
of 18 U.S.C. § 1001 for failing to disclose the payments he received from IMS
as part of his annual obligation as a federal government employee to report any
potential conflicts of interests.
This matter was handled by the Civil Division’s Commercial
Litigation Branch and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of
Texas, with assistance from the Department of Justice Office of Inspector
General.
Except to the extent of the admissions in Hudson’s guilty
plea, the claims resolved by the civil settlement are allegations only, and
there has been no determination of liability.
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