SACRAMENTO, Calif. — On Tuesday, after a four-day trial, a
federal jury found Robert S. Turchin, 68, of Salinas, guilty of one count of
conspiracy to commit bribery and identity fraud and three counts of identity
fraud, U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced.
“This prosecution of a California state employee for bribery
resulting in grave danger to public safety is very troubling,” U.S. Attorney
Scott stated. ”It is alarming to think that unqualified persons were licensed
to operate big rigs and buses on our public roadways. We will continue to do
everything we can to root out public corruption at any level, and hold those in
positions of trust accountable for their greed.”
According to evidence presented at trial, Turchin was an
employee at the Salinas field office for the Department of Motor Vehicles,
including between 2012 and 2015. Turchin was responsible for conducting tests
for applicants for commercial licenses to operate 18-wheel tractor-trailers and
commercial buses.
The trial evidence demonstrated that truck school owner
Mangal Gill offered to get people commercial licenses without having to pass
the written tests or even take the required behind-the-wheel tests. Gill worked
with Turchin and another DMV employee, Emma Klem, to have them access the DMV
database to fraudulently update the tests at Gill’s request.
During the investigation, confidential operatives were able
to obtain three official commercial licenses in 2013 and 2014. Collectively,
they paid Gill over $12,000 after Turchin and Klem accessed the DMV database to
fraudulently enter passing scores for the operatives despite the fact that the
operatives did not pass or otherwise take the required tests. The trial evidence
also demonstrated that Gill and Turchin continued to be involved in this
fraudulent conduct until March 28, 2015, days before agents executed search
warrants and found in Turchin’s vehicle slips of paper containing the numbers
of fraudulently updated driver license records as well as several envelopes
full of cash totaling over $10,000. The trial evidence showed that Turchin and
his co-conspirators falsified DMV database records for at least 40 individuals
for the purpose of obtaining commercial licenses.
This case is the product of a series of ongoing
investigations by the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland
Security Investigations (HSI), the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the
California DMV Office of Internal Affairs. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Todd A.
Pickles and Rosanne Rust are prosecuting the case.
Co-defendants Gill and Klem previously pleaded guilty to
counts of conspiracy to commit bribery and identity fraud and are awaiting
sentencing.
Turchin is scheduled to be sentenced by U.S. District Judge
Garland E. Burrell Jr. on September 21, 2018. Turchin faces a maximum statutory
penalty of five years in prison for the conspiracy count and a maximum of 15
years in prison for the fraud involving identification documents counts, and up
to a $250,000 fine per each count. The actual sentence, however, will be
determined at the discretion of the court after consideration of any applicable
statutory factors and the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which take into
account a number of variables.
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