False SDVOSB Certifications Land New York Man Behind Bars

False SDVOSB certifications have earned a New York man nearly three and a half years in prison.

In May, I brought you the story of John White’s conviction for false SDVOSB certifications, and noted that sentencing was yet to come.  Well, last week the federal judge handed down a sentence, and Mr. White is no longer a free man.

According to a U.S. Department of Justice press release, White was sentenced to 41 months in prison for defrauding the government by falsely claiming to be a service-disabled veteran.  White’s company was awarded three SDVOSB set-aside contracts and one VOSB set-aside contract as a result of the fraud.  When the government began investigating White’s company, White tried to recruit an actual service-disabled veteran to pose as the company’s majority owner.

John White will now have a few years in the Big House to consider the consequences of falsely stealing the honor of our nation’s service-disabled veterans and falsely stealing four contracts intended for those veterans.  If the DOJ has has any sense of irony, it will ship him to a federal facility where genuine SDVOSBs are on-site providing services.

8(a) Contractor Fraudulently Evades 8(a) Sole Source Threshold–With Procuring Agency’s Knowledge

A soon-to-graduate 8(a) contractor submitted a fraudulent proposal designed to evade the 8(a) Program’s sole source limits, with the full knowledge of the procuring agency in question, according to a decision issued by the U.S. Court of Federal Claims.

As described in Veridyne Corporation v. United States, No. 06-150C (Fed.Cl. 2012),Veridyne Corporation greatly underestimated the cost of a contract in order to slip it under the 8(a) Program’s sole source threshold, but the scheme eventually collapsed, leaving Veridyne liable for false claims and procurement fraud–and leaving the procuring agency in question with egg on its face and a lot of explaining to do.

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