Man Pleads Guilty to DOD Bribery and Kickback Conspiracy
https://www.justice.gov/usao-edva/pr/man-pleads-guilty-dod-bribery-and-kickback-conspiracy
Department of Justice
U.S. Attorneys Office
Eastern District of Virginia
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, January 25, 2018
Man Pleads Guilty to DOD Bribery and Kickback Conspiracy
ALEXANDRIA, Va. An Alabama man pleaded guilty today to his role in a bribery and kickback scheme involving a contract for the Department of Defenses Office of Inspector General (DOD OIG).
According to court documents, Ronald A. Capallia, Jr., 37, accepted over $700,000 in kickbacks from William S. Wilson, of Florida, in exchange for unlawfully steering work to Wilsons companies in connection with prime government contracts, and further assisted Wilson in providing bribes to former DOD OIG employee Matthew Kekoa LumHo, 42, of Fairfax Station. At the time of the kickbacks, Capallia worked for a telecommunications company that had been awarded a prime contract to provide an array of voice and data services to the DOD OIG and other federal agencies. In return for the kickbacks, Capallia repeatedly caused his employer to order services from Wilsons companies, even though he knew that Wilsons companies had no relevant expertise in providing the services to be performed, and despite knowing that there was no legitimate business reason to involve Wilsons companies. Capallia also submitted millions of dollars in false service orders to the DOD OIG for services that he, Wilson, and LumHo knew would not be provided to the government. Capallia arranged to submit these false service orders so that Wilson could substantially inflate the prices his company was charging indirectly to the government, and to conceal the fact that several of the service orders were pretexts through which to pay bribes to LumHo. Wilson routed the kickbacks to Capallia in the form of over $500,000 in supposed salary payments to Capallias relative for a job that did not exist, through the purchase of two brand new vehicles each worth over $40,000, through over $60,000 in Caribbean cruises, airfare, and hotel accommodations, and through the purchase of electronics equipment.
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