Contractors sent to prison for fraud scheme

Two contractors are going to prison for creating a scheme where they submitted fraudlent bids from multiple companies, creating an illusion of competition. Are other indictments on the way? We'll have to wait and see.

The second of at least two co-conspirators has been sentenced for participating in a alleged contracting scheme that created the illusion of competition.

Anthony R. Bilby, 40, of Leesburg, Va., was sentenced this week to 16 months in prison and two years of supervised probation. He pleaded guilty in December to conspiracy to commit wire fraud, and what the Justice Department described as “major government fraud.”

As part of his plea, Bilby agreed to forfeit nearly $1.1 million -- his alleged proceeds from the conspiracy.


 

RELATED DOCUMENTS

Statement of Facts for Anthony Bilby

Statement of Facts for Thomas Flynn


A second man, Thomas S. Flynn, pleaded guilty in October, and has been sentenced to three months. According to court records, Flynn received at least $80,900 as part of the plot.

Neither the Justice Department nor court records are naming the companies Bilby and Flynn worked for, but it is obvious from reading the statement of facts that was released as part of their guilty pleas that others at the companies and from inside the government were involved.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia said no one else has been indicted and declined to comment on whether the investigation is continuing.

However, in a statement released when Bilby pleaded guilty, the Justice Department said he agreed to cooperate with investigators as part of his plea agreement.

The companies involved are described as IT resellers and also are certified as service-disabled, veteran-owned companies.

At least three companies had people involved in the scheme. Bilby is described as an outside sales rep working at least one of the companies.

People inside the government also were involved and provided Bilby with internal government documents, according to the statement of facts.

The way the scheme worked is that Bilby or Flynn or unnamed others would submit bids from multiple companies, but only one bid from one company was designed to be considered a winning bid. The other bids were purposely higher so they were guaranteed to lose.

The government was to get the impression that a competition was taking place.

The co-conspirators shared company logos and templates from their companies so that a single person would be preparing the bids from all the companies.

They also took turns on which companies would play the role of the winning bidder and which would be tapped as the losing bidders.

The co-conspirators would then share a 10 percent cut off of the profit gained under the winning contract.

The conspiracy took place over a five-year period.

Agencies with contracts targeted in the scheme include the Environmental Protection Agency, Homeland Security Department, the General Services Administration and the Agriculture Department.

According to the statement of facts, the largest contract was with DHS for a wide-area network optimization that was worth $24.1 million. The losing bids came in at $26.7 million and $29.1 million.

I can only say, Wow. I’ll be doing my best to follow this case because it is hard to imagine that others won’t be charged.

I’ve also put in a request for an interview with the U.S. attorney involved the case.

Let me know if you hear anything.

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