Friday, February 09, 2007

NSA Employee Caught in the Act

$770,000.00 worth of conflict of interest.
NSA Employee Pleads Guilty to Conflict of Interest:
"Wayne J. Schepens, 37, of Severna Park, Md., pleaded guilty today to engaging in a conflict of interest by using his official position as a National Security Agency (NSA) employee to cause government contracts to be awarded to companies owned and operated by Schepens or his spouse, announced Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher for the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein for the District of Maryland.

'While he was working for NSA, Wayne Schepens arranged to award government contracts worth over $770,000 to companies in which he and his wife had a financial interest,' said U.S. Attorney Rosenstein. 'It is a crime for government employees to participate in awarding contracts that bring them personal financial benefits.'"

What I find galling is that instead of getting ALL OF THE MONEY back the government only fines these con-artists a fraction of the amount. Maximum of $250,000.00 fine in this case.

And to make matters worse, this guy was stealing from a program that is supposed to train soldiers. And in the meantime soldiers in Iraq, Afghanistan, and even here in the USA don't have all of the equipment they need to do their jobs safely.

The crook has yet to be sentenced and I hope he gets made an example of. Give Halliburton-Cheney something to think about.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Former NSA worker gets probation
He steered $770,000 in contracts to firms he and wife owned
Originally published April 7, 2007
A former National Security Agency employee was sentenced yesterday in U.S. District Court to two years' probation for steering more than $770,000 in government contracts to companies in which he and his wife had a financial interest, federal prosecutors said.

U.S. District Judge Catherine C. Blake ordered Wayne J. Schepens, 37, of Severna Park to serve the first six months of his sentence in home detention and on electronic monitoring, the U.S. attorney's office said. The judge also fined Schepens $100,000.
...
At the time, prosecutors said, Schepens set up a company called JLSolutions, and his wife operated as chief executive of two companies - called Schep Air and Engineering, and CDXperts - which were run out of the couple's home.
...
http://www.cdxperts.com/index.html

Connecticut Man1 said...

Interesting stuff.