LOS ANGELES
– A former public official in Los Angeles County’s Real Estate Division
involved in awarding contracts to real estate developers and contractors has
agreed to plead guilty to lying to FBI agents and subscribing to a false tax
return in an effort to cover up his receipt of illegal bribes.
In a plea
agreement filed today, Thomas M. Shepos, 68, of Palmdale, agreed to plead
guilty to two felony offenses – making false statements in which he denied
receiving bribes and kickbacks while working for the county, and subscribing to
a false tax return for the year 2014 in which he failed to report $139,400 in
income, including more than $100,000 in bribe payments. In the plea agreement,
Shepos admits that he failed to report a total of $434,000 in income he
received over a seven-year period.
As part of
his plea agreement, Shepos has agreed to cooperate with an ongoing federal
investigation.
For
approximately 20 years, until he retired last year, Shepos worked in the
county’s Real Estate Division, where he negotiated leases and contract terms
with private developers and contractors. According to the plea agreement,
because of his seniority, Shepos had “significant autonomy to contractually
bind the county.”
In the plea
agreement, Shepos admitted accepting bribes from Arman Gabaee, a Beverly Hills
real estate developer who was indicted in May on bribery and wire fraud charges
in connection with his attempts to secure a $45 million county lease in the
Hawthorne Mall. Beginning in 2010 or 2011, Gabaee began giving Shepos monthly
bribe payments of $1,000 or more in exchange for Shepos providing Gabaee with
non-public information and preferential treatment, according to the plea
agreement filed today.
The plea
agreement further states that Gabaee offered to buy a million-dollar property
in Northern California as a bribe for Shepos. In exchange for the property,
Gabaee sought Shepos’ assistance securing a lease for the county’s Department
of Public Social Services in the Hawthorne Mall, which Gabaee owned and was
redeveloping.
Shepos also
admitted in the plea agreement that he accepted bribes totaling $250,000 to
$300,000 from an unnamed electrical contractor in exchange for Shepos’
assistance securing five to seven county contracts ultimately awarded to the
contractor.
When
interviewed by federal agents in November 2016, Shepos lied about the bribery
schemes, falsely claiming that he had never received anything of value from
anyone doing business with the county. He also lied about numerous unexplained
deposits into his bank accounts, claiming that the funds were gambling
proceeds, as opposed to bribes or kickbacks.
“Corrupt
officials who abuse their power to line their own pockets undermine the
public’s trust in government,” said United States Attorney Nick Hanna. “We are
committed to ending these backroom deals and bringing these criminals to
justice.”
“Public
officials like defendant Shepos, who misuse their position of trust for
personal gain, undermine the integrity of their office and deny honest services
to the residents they purport to serve,” said Paul Delacourt, the Assistant
Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office. “The FBI will
continue to work with our partners to restore the public’s trust in our county
officials.”
In relation
to the tax charge, Shepos admitted that he received a total of $434,400 from
2010 through 2016 that he failed to report on his federal income tax returns.
Shepos has agreed to file corrected tax returns and pay back taxes – estimated
to be approximately $110,000, plus a yet-to-be-determined fraud penalty.
“Public
officials need to be reminded of the trust and duty bestowed upon them by the
taxpayers to serve the public’s interest, not their own,” said Special Agent in
Charge R. Damon Rowe, IRS Criminal Investigation. “IRS Criminal Investigation
stands committed to weeding out individuals who abuse the privilege of their
positions for personal gain, while dodging the federal tax system.”
Shepos will
be summonsed to appear for an arraignment in United States District Court,
likely later this month.
Once he
enters the guilty pleas to the two charges, Shepos will face a statutory
maximum sentence of eight years in prison.
Gabaee is
currently scheduled to go on trial on February 26, 2019.
The case
against Shepos is part of an ongoing investigation being conducted by the
Federal Bureau of Investigation and IRS Criminal Investigation.
This matter
is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Ruth C. Pinkel and
Lindsey Greer Dotson of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section.
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