The U.S. Justice Department released
the below information:
A former contractor at the
Military Sealift Command (MSC) was indicted for his role in a bribery and fraud
conspiracy from approximately 1999 to 2014, in which he allegedly received
almost $3 million dollars in bribes. Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth
A. Blanco of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Dana
J. Boente of the Eastern District of Virginia made the announcement.
Scott B. Miserendino Sr., 58,
formerly of Stafford, Virginia, was charged in a five-count indictment with one
count of conspiracy to commit bribery and honest services mail fraud, one count
of bribery and three counts of honest services mail fraud. Miserendino’s
arraignment will be scheduled at a later date.
According to allegations in
the indictment, Miserendino was a government contractor at MSC, an entity of
the U.S. Department of the Navy that provided support and specialized services
to the Navy and other U.S. military forces. The indictment alleges that
Miserendino and Joseph P. Allen, the owner of a government contracting company,
conspired to use Miserendino’s position at MSC to enrich themselves through
bribery.
Specifically, beginning in
1999, Miserendino allegedly used his position and influence at MSC to assist
Allen and his company in obtaining and expanding a commission agreement with a
telecommunications company, which sold maritime satellite services to MSC,
according to the indictment. For more than a decade, Miserendino allegedly used
his influence at MSC to take official acts to benefit the telecommunications
company, which through the commission agreement, also benefited Allen and his
company. Among his actions, the indictment alleges that Miserendino: advised
officials at MSC and on their ships about using the telecommunications
company’s services; authorized Allen and his employees to perform services on
MSC ships and ensure that the equipment on those ships defaulted to the
telecommunications company’s services rather than that of an alternative
provider; and facilitated payment to the telecommunications company for the
services it rendered to MSC. Unknown to MSC or the telecommunications company,
throughout the scheme, Allen paid half of the commissions he received from the
telecommunications company to Miserendino as bribes, according to allegations
in the indictment.
For his role in the scheme,
Allen, 56, of Panama City, Florida, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy
to commit bribery on April 19, 2017, before U.S. Magistrate Judge Lawrence R.
Leonard, in Norfolk, Virginia. Sentencing is scheduled for July 28, 2017,
before U.S. District Judge Arenda L. Wright Allen, in Norfolk.
The charges and allegations
contained in an indictment are merely accusations. The defendant is presumed
innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of
law.
The Norfolk offices of the
FBI, the Defense Criminal Investigative Service and the Naval Criminal
Investigative Service investigated the case. Trial Attorneys Sean F. Mulryne
and Molly Gaston of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section and
Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen W. Haynie of the Eastern District of Virginia
are prosecuting the case.
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