WASHINGTON
– The owner of Eelon Training Academy (“Eelon”), a privately owned,
non-accredited school purporting to specialize in digital media 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
payments to Eelon that were supposed to be dedicated to providing vocational
training for military veterans with service-connected disabilities. Assistant Attorney General Brian A.
Benczkowski of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney
Jessie K. Liu for the District of Columbia made the announcement.
Michelle
Stevens, 57, of Waldorf, Maryland, pleaded guilty to one count of bribing a
public official. The plea was entered
before U.S. District Judge John D. Bates of the District of Columbia. In April 2018, two other individuals, Albert
Poawui and Sombo Kanneh, pleaded guilty in related cases to bribery and
conspiracy to commit bribery, respectively.
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 Stevens’ plea, she created Eelon Training
Academy after learning about the VR&E program from a VR&E program
counselor. In or about September 2016,
the VR&E program counselor facilitated the first tuition payment from the
VA to Eelon. Shortly after receiving
this payment, the VR&E program counselor told Stevens that she should give
him seven percent of the monies paid by the VA to Eelon.
Stevens
admitted to later making two cash payments of $1,500 to the VR&E program
counselor in furtherance of her scheme to bribe the VR&E program counselor
in exchange for the VR&E program counselor sending veterans under his
supervision to Eelon and facilitating the VA’s payments to Stevens. In total, Stevens received approximately
$83,000 from the VA for education that she purported to provide to veteran
students. Stevens submitted invoices to
the VA amounting to no less than $300,000 for the tuition and equipment of
seven students, but was not paid the balance of the invoice amount due to the
VA’s ongoing investigation into Eelon following complaints by students about
the poor quality of education.
In an
effort to procure the outstanding payments from the VA, Stevens made numerous
fraudulent misrepresentations to the VA, and maintained fraudulent student
files in the event of an audit by the VA. For example, Stevens emailed to the
VA an “attendance” sheet for eight students.
The attendance sheet was created by Stevens and included handwritten
check marks purporting to represent the dates that the students attended
class. In fact, as Stevens well knew,
the students had not attended class on many of those dates nor was class even
held on many of those dates.
Stevens’
plea is the third guilty plea in an ongoing investigation by the FBI’s
Washington Field Office and the VA Office of Inspector General. Assistant U.S. Attorney Sonali D. Patel of
the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia and Trial Attorney
Simon J. Cataldo of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section are
prosecuting the case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Adrienne Dedjinou and Paralegal
Specialist Joshua Fein also assisted in the prosecution of this case.
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