The owner of Atius Technology Institute (“Atius”), a
privately owned, non-accredited school specializing in information technology
courses, pleaded guilty today to bribing a public official at the U.S.
Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) in exchange for the public official’s
facilitation of over $2 million in payments that were supposed to be dedicated
to providing vocational training for military veterans with service-connected
disabilities. Acting Assistant Attorney
General John P. Cronan of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and U.S.
Attorney Jessie K. Liu for the District of Columbia made the announcement.
Albert S. Poawui, 41, of Laurel, Maryland, pleaded guilty to
an Information alleging one count of bribing a public official. The plea was entered before U.S. District
Judge John D. Bates of the District of Columbia.
According to Poawui’s admissions made in connection with his
plea, the Vocational Rehabilitation and Employment (VR&E) program is a VA
program that provides disabled U.S. military veterans with education and
employment-related services. VR&E
program counselors advise veterans under their supervision which schools to
attend and facilitate payments to those schools for veterans’ tuition and
necessary supplies.
According to admissions made in connection with Poawui’s
plea, in or about August 2015, Poawui and a VR&E program counselor agreed
that Poawui would pay the counselor a seven percent cash kickback of all
payments made by the VA to Atius. In
exchange, the counselor steered VR&E program veterans to Atius and approved
Atius’s invoices for payment.
Poawui admitted that the counselor and a second VR&E
counselor approved payments to Atius without regard for the accuracy of
necessary documentation in order to maximize the scheme’s profits. Between August 2015 and December 2017, Poawui
and the scheme’s other participants caused the VA to pay Atius approximately
$2,217,259.44. Poawui paid the first VR&E
counselor over $155,000 as part of the illicit bribery scheme. These bribery payments were hand-delivered by
Poawui or an Atius employee to the VR&E counselor or the counselor’s
assistant, a veteran who was enrolled in the VR&E program.
Poawui also admitted that, with the knowing assistance of a
second Atius employee, he made numerous false representations to the VA to
enhance the scheme’s profits. For
example, Poawui and the second employee certified to the VA that veterans
attending Atius were enrolled in up to 32 hours of class per week, when in fact
both knew that Atius offered a maximum of six weekly class hours. After the VA initiated an administrative
audit of Atius, Poawui, the VR&E counselor and the Atius employee took
steps to conceal the truth about earlier misrepresentations they had made to
the VA.
Poawui’s plea is the result of an ongoing investigation by
the FBI’s Washington Field Office and the VA Office of Inspector General. Trial Attorney Simon J. Cataldo of the
Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Sonali
D. Patel of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia are
prosecuting the case.
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