A former contractor for the U.S. Navy Military Sealift
Command (MSC) and a co-founder of a Chesapeake, Virginia, government contracting
company were sentenced today for their roles in a scheme to bribe and provide
illegal gratuities to public officials to secure lucrative military contracts.
Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Dana J. Boente of the Eastern
District of Virginia, Special Agent in Charge Royce E. Curtin of the FBI’s
Norfolk Office, Executive Assistant Director Charles T. May Jr. of the Naval
Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS), and Special Agent in Charge Robert E.
Craig, Jr. of the Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS) Mid-Atlantic
Field Office made the announcement.
United States District Judge Rebecca Beach Smith of the Eastern District
of Virginia imposed the sentences.
Scott B. Miserendino Sr., 55, of Stafford, Virginia, and
Timothy S. Miller, 58, of Chesapeake, Virginia, were sentenced to serve 96
months in prison and 24 months in prison, respectively. Miserendino was also ordered to forfeit
$212,000 and Miller was ordered to forfeit $167,000. Miller was also ordered to pay a fine of
$25,000. In August 2014, Miserendino
pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bribery and one count of
bribery, and Miller pleaded guilty to providing illegal gratuities to Miserendino
and Kenny E. Toy, the former Afloat Programs Manager for the N6 Command,
Control, Communication, and Computer Systems Directorate.
According to admissions in his plea agreement, Miserendino
was a government contractor at the MSC, which is the leading provider of
transportation for the U.S. Navy. In
that position, Miserendino worked closely with Toy, who exercised substantial
influence over the MSC contracting process.
In November 2004, Miserendino and Toy initiated a bribery scheme that
spanned five years, involved multiple co-conspirators, including two companies,
and resulted in Miserendino and Toy receiving more than $265,000 in cash, among
other things of value, in exchange for official acts in connection with the
award of MSC contracts.
Specifically, Miserendino and Toy solicited cash from
co-conspirators, including a $50,000 cash payment from Miller and his business
partner, Dwayne A. Hardman, to influence the award of government
contracts. Miserendino admitted that he
and Toy also accepted other things of value in exchange for official acts,
including a vacation rental, laptop computers, flat screen televisions, a
football helmet signed by Troy Aikman, a wine refrigerator and softball bats.
According to Miller’s admissions, during the scheme, his
company received approximately $2.5 million in business from the MSC, despite
its limited record of past performance in the industry. Miserendino and Toy also directed $3 million
in business from MSC to another company run by other co-conspirators.
After the cash payments were delivered, Miller admitted that
he directed the creation of a false promissory note disguising the illegal
gratuities as a personal loan to another individual. Miserendino also admitted to engaging in a
scheme to conceal his criminal activity by arranging for more than $85,000 to
be paid to Hardman in an attempt to dissuade him from reporting the bribery
scheme to law enforcement authorities.
Earlier this year, five other individuals pleaded guilty and
were sentenced in connection with the bribery scheme:
Toy pleaded guilty
to bribery and was sentenced to eight years in prison and ordered to forfeit
$100,000;
Hardman pleaded
guilty to bribery and was sentenced to eight years in prison and ordered to
forfeit $144,000;
Michael P. McPhail
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery and was sentenced to three years
in prison and ordered to forfeit $57,000;
Roderic J. Smith
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery and was sentenced to four years
in prison and ordered to forfeit $175,000; and
Adam C. White
pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bribery and was sentenced to two years
in prison and ordered to forfeit $57,000.
The case was investigated by the FBI, NCIS and DCIS, and
prosecuted by Trial Attorney Emily Rae Woods of the Criminal Division’s Public
Integrity Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen W. Haynie of the Eastern
District of Virginia.
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