Former U.S. Army Contracting Official Sentenced to 40 Months in Prison for Accepting Bribes

Fri Oct 23, 2009 12:31pm EDT
 
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Former U.S. Army Contracting Official Sentenced to 40 Months in Prison for
Accepting Bribes





WASHINGTON, Oct. 23 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- A former U.S. Army contracting
official was sentenced today to 40 months in prison for accepting more than
$80,000 in bribes in exchange for corruptly providing contract work to two
Afghan trucking companies, announced Assistant Attorney General of the
Criminal Division Lanny A. Breuer and U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride of the
Eastern District of Virginia. 


James Paul Clifton, 35, of Newport News, Va., was also ordered by U.S.
District Court Judge Liam O'Grady to serve three years of supervised release
following the prison term. Clifton pleaded guilty to one count of bribery on
Aug. 7, 2009, in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia. 


The U.S. Army operates the Bagram Airfield in support of military operations
in Afghanistan. According to court documents, the Army assigns a contracting
officer representative (COR) to review all transportation requests and
transportation providers. The Army assigned Clifton, a staff sergeant, to be
the COR at the Bagram Airfield in February 2008. Clifton's duties included
overseeing the companies providing ground transportation to and from Bagram
Airfield and objectively determining whether the companies' service had been
adequate. 


According to the plea agreement, employees for AIT, a trucking company
operating at Bagram Airfield, began to offer Clifton gifts almost immediately
after he was assigned to his position. Despite initially refusing the gifts,
Clifton admitted he accepted a cellular telephone in May 2008, paid for by
AIT. According to court documents, AIT then began to make payments to Clifton
at a rate of $20,000 a month. Clifton admitted that in exchange for the
payments, he agreed to assign one extra day of trucking service to the
company. Clifton also admitted that later in the month, another Afghan
trucking company, ATT, entered into a similar illegal agreement with him.
Clifton further admitted that in exchange for bribe payments of $15,000 a
month, he assigned ATT an additional day of trucking service a month. Between
May and October 2008, Clifton admitted, ATT and AIT made $87,000 in payments
to him. According to court documents, affiliates of both companies wired the
payments from Dubai, United Arab Emirates, to Clifton's then-girlfriend in
Newport News, Va. According to the terms of their agreement, the companies had
agreed to pay Clifton an additional $10,000, although he never received the
payments. 


The case is being prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Steve A.
Linick, Deputy Chief of the Criminal Division's Fraud Section, and Fraud
Section Trial Attorney Liam Brennan. The investigation is being conducted by
Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the FBI and members of the National
Procurement Fraud Task Force. 


The National Procurement Fraud Task Force, created in October 2006 by the
Department of Justice, was designed to promote the early detection,
identification, prevention and prosecution of procurement fraud associated
with the increase in government contracting activity for national security and
other government programs. 




SOURCE  U.S. Department of Justice

U.S. Department of Justice, +1-202-514-2007, +1-202-514-1888 (TDD)

 

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