Jennifer Smith’s sexual harassment and gender discrimination case against Eugene/Springfield Public Utility District Joint Apprenticeship Training Committee of Oregon is headed for a resolution. Following an investigation by the state’s Bureau of Labor and Industries, the apprentice linewoman’s case has been sent to the Oregon State Apprenticeship and Training Council for a final decision, expected sometime in October. Smith filed complaints in December 2009 with BOLI asking it to overturn a local JATC ruling that she was not ready to graduate as a journey-level linewoman. She claimed gender discrimination and sexual harassment during her apprenticeship resulted in her failure to
Matrix Service Co., Tulsa, Okla., said on Sept. 10 it would delay release of its fourth-quarter earnings statement and annual report to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission at least until Sept. 28, pending an internal investigation of fraud allegations against current and former employees in one of its offices. The publicly held industrial engineer-constructor declines to identify the nature of the claims or the names of the employees allegedly involved. However, it did say the employees identified in the allegations have been suspended without pay until the internal probe is completed. Matrix says it believes the financial impact of
The three-year-long civil and criminal investigation of Louis Berger Group’s billings for federal aid and reconstruction projects came to light on Aug. 9 just as the federal government was ramping up audits and investigations of Afghanistan and Iraq reconstruction contracts looking for possible improprieties. Photo By Michael Goodman For ENR Neither Wolff nor Berger have been charged with any wrongdoing. Photo By Michael Goodman For ENR Fields says his office is conducting numerous criminal investigations and that his staff is working closely with the Dept. of Justice to root out cheating and lawbreaking. Related Links: Probe Leads To Wolff’s Likely
A three-year-long federal investigation of alleged overbilling on reconstruction contracts in Afghanistan by engineer Louis Berger Group appears likely to force Derish M. Wolff, chairman of the firm’s holding company, from his job, according to court documents filed last week. Photo: Michael Goodman For ENR Wolff’s terms of departure from the company are controversial. The company is trying to resolve Wolff’s status as chairman of Berger Group Holdings, it said a statement released on August 16. “We anticipate that the matter of his employment to be resolved by the end of next week,” the company said. Contacted at his New
Paris-based construction giant Technip S.A. has agreed to pay $338 million to avoid prosecution and settle civil suits alleging violations of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act in a 1990s and early 2000s bribery scheme to win $6 billion in contracts in Nigeria. Under the June 29 deal with the U.S. Justice Dept. and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, Technip says it will pay the fines over a two-year period and “improve its compliance procedures,” including appointment of a monitor. The firm was part of the TSKJ engineering-procurement-construction consortium involved in building the Bonny Island liquified- natural-gas plant during that
A new bill proposed in the U.S. Congress would give the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration the power to request up to 20 years of prison time for construction company executives, project managers and safety directors for willful safety violations resulting in serious injury or death. The Protecting America’s Workers Act, which was introduced by U.S. Rep. Lynn Woolsey (D-Calif.), has raised objections from the Associated General Contractors of America, which says the legislation “creates financial and legal disincentives to find and fix” safety problems.
The American Society of Civil Engineers will release 3,000 free copies of “Ethicana,” a new anti-corruption DVD. Funded by firms, global banks and others, it is the centerpiece of a revved-up training program for educating engineers, builders and students worldwide. It targets costly fraud, bribery and corruption practices.
Suspected of paying bribes to secure overseas contracts, three directors of the U.K. subsidiary of France’s power-equipment and rolling-stock maker Alstom S.A., Paris, have been arrested by the British Serious Fraud Office. Money laundering and other offences also are alleged. Arrests followed dawn raids on five Alstom offices and four homes across the country on March 24. Swiss police are involved in the investigation.
James Delayo, a former inspector for the New York City Dept. of Buildings, has pleaded guilty to taking cash payments in exchange for falsifying paperwork relating to crane inspections and certifying crane-operator exams. He is recommended to receive a two- to six-year prison sentence after being charged with bribe-receiving in the second degree, considered to be a Class C felony. “This is another case where responsibility and safety were trumped by greed,” said Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. “These crimes threaten the industry that built our great city, and this fraud hurts the honest business owners and employees who
After nearly a week of extra-innings deliberation, a New York City jury finally convicted regional concrete testing giant Testwell Laboratories on Feb. 25 of racketeering stemming from allegations it filed fake test results on more than 80 buildings. Testwell Laboratories, its CEO, V. Reddy Kancharla, and Vice President Vincent Barone were found guilty of enterprise corruption, which carries a mandatory prison term of one year and could put the two executives behind bars for as many as 25 years. "Testwell’s conduct was reprehensible not only for its pattern of theft and deception, but for its utter disregard for the safety