SAN JUAN, P.R. – Today, Senator Abel Nazario-Quiñones was
arrested and charged in a 39-count indictment alleging the making or use of
false documents and wire fraud, announced Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez, United
States Attorney for the District of Puerto Rico. The Puerto Rico Comptroller’s
Office, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) Office of Inspector General (OIG),
and the FBI are in charge of the investigation.
Defendant Nazario-Quiñones was first elected Mayor of Yauco,
a municipality in Southwest Puerto Rico, in 2000, and continued to be the mayor
until December of 2016. In May 2013, during a routine audit of the
Municipality’s records, the PR Comptroller’s Office discovered that municipal
employees were required to work two voluntary hours per day. This issue was
referred to the DOL Wage and Hour Division (WHD), which determined that this
voluntary work requirement was a violation of the Fair Labor Standards Act.
On February 2015, Nazario-Quiñones signed a Back Wage
Compliance Payment Agreement with the DOL Wage and Hour Division in which he
agreed to pay back wages totaling $588,961.43 to 177 municipal employees for
the period of August 1, 2012 to July 31, 2014 according to a predetermined
schedule listing each employee who was owed wages, the amount they were owed,
and the date by which each employee had to be paid. The Agreement allowed the
Municipality until February 2018 to complete all the payments.
In August 2016, during their next routine audit of the
Municipality’s records, the PR Comptroller’s Office learned that, although
employees had been receiving lump sum payments according to the terms of the
Agreement, the Municipality unilaterally began withholding the employees’
regular wages without the knowledge or consent of the DOL WHD. This issue was
referred to the DOL WHD who, in November 2016, referred it to the DOL Office of
Inspector General (OIG).
The DOL OIG ultimately identified 30 contract municipal
employees who, by the end of his mayoral term in 2016, Nazario-Quiñones had
certified were paid their back wages pursuant to the Agreement. The DOL OIG
also determined that those 30 contract municipal employees, after receiving the
wages to which they were entitled under the Agreement, had their regular pay
with-held for certain periods of time at the direction of Nazario-Quiñones
while he provided various explanations to the employees as to why they were
receiving these lump sum checks.
According to the indictment, between February 2015 and
December 2016, Nazario-Quiñones falsely certified to the Department of Labor
that he had paid back wages to the employees, according to the terms of the
Agreement, and that he would not take any retaliatory action against the
employees for accepting the payment. In
fact, however, Nazario-Quiñones directed the payroll department to withhold
future earnings of these employees for varying lengths of time, despite their
continued work for the municipality. It is also alleged that defendant
committed wire fraud as some of the forms used to certify the payments to the
DOL WHD were sent via email.
“The defendant’s conduct undermines the confidence employees
place in those who are supposed to protect and represent them,” said U.S.
Attorney Rosa Emilia Rodríguez-Vélez. “Government officials are governed by
rules that are supposed to protect employees and the public. Yauco’s former
mayor, skilled at convincing individuals to place their trust in him, engaged
in a scheme to defraud his own employees. We will continue investigating and
prosecuting this type of financial fraud to the full extent of the law.”
“An important mission of the Office of Inspector General is
to investigate allegations that relate to U.S. Department of Labor programs
designed to protect the wages of the American workforce. We will continue to
work with our local and federal law enforcement partners to investigate these
types of allegations,” stated Michael C. Mikulka, Special Agent-in-Charge, New
York Region, U. S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General.
The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States
Attorney Scott Anderson. The case was investigated by the Puerto Rico
Comptroller’s Office, the U.S. Department of Labor (DOL) Office of Inspector
General (OIG), and the FBI. Defendant Nazario-Quiñones is facing a maximum term
of imprisonment of 20 years, and a fine not to exceed $1,000,000.
An indictment is only an accusation and not evidence of
guilt. The defendant is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
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