Global design firm Louis Berger and the U.S. Justice Dept. announced a settlement on July 17 of bribery charges against former senior managers in Asia that includes a three-year deferred prosecution of the firm, suspending prosecution of any criminal charges and a $17.1-million fine.
Like its peers, Odebrecht, the celebrated Brazilian mega-builder, is facing twofold headwinds of a slowing domestic economy and a murky corruption investigation involving billions of dollars in bribes and kickbacks that contractors allegedly paid to win deals with state-owned oil giant Petrobras.
Derish Wolff, the 79-year-old former CEO of global design firm Louis Berger, who pleaded guilty last December to inflating overhead rates for work on cost-reimbursable U.S. Agency for International Development contracts, was sentenced to 12 months of home confinement and a $4.5-million fine, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced on May 8.
C.W. Matthews Contracting Co., one of Georgia's largest roadbuilders, agreed to pay a $1-million fine as part of a settlement with the U.S. Federal Highway Administration over false claims related to the disadvantaged-business-enterprise program.
A Federal judge in Atlanta has sentenced one of the partners in the multistate crime spree involving forged Chubb surety bonds to four years, nine months of prison.
Investigators from the New York state attorney general's office on Feb. 18 carted off boxes of documents from the Uniondale, N.Y., office of GEB HiRise, an engineering practice that had been employed by an insurer to inspect homes damaged by Superstorm Sandy in 2012.
Michael Goodman for ENR Derish Wolff in 2003 as he appeared on the cover of ENR. Related Links: Louis Berger Group Completes Compliance Overhaul U.S. Charges Ex-Berger Group CEO With Overbilling Scheme Probe Leads to Wolffs Likely Exit From Berger Derish Wolff, the former chief executive of Louis Berger Group, pleaded guilty Dec. 12 to inflating overhead rates for work on cost-reimbursable U.S. Agency for International Development contracts and now faces a possible prison sentence and heavy fines.His sentencing is scheduled for March, 2015.The plea agreement in federal court in Trenton represents a bitter conclusion to a career in which
A U.S. District Court judge in Newark, N.J., has ordered Gordon D. McDonald, a former project manager at two New Jersey Superfund sites, to pay $4.36 million in restitution for his role in a $1.5-million bid-rigging, fraud and kickback schemes involving subcontract awards.In an Oct. 20 ruling, Judge Susan Wigenton said that nearly $4 million of the judgement against McDonald, a former project manager for Niagara Falls, N.Y.-based Sevenson Environmental Services Inc., would go to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency.McDonald was convicted last September on multiple counts and now is serving a 14-year prison term. At the time, the U.S.