Press release:
MEDIA CONTACT:
Stacy Kika, 202-564-0906, kika.stacy@epa.gov
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE
No. 12-OPA060
Supervisor of Michigan Town Sentenced to Three
Years in Prison
WASHINGTON (August 3, 2012) - William Morgan,
the former supervisor of Royal Oak Township, a suburb of Detroit, was sentenced
in federal court to three years in prison. Mr. Morgan had previously entered a
guilty plea to charges that he conspired to defraud the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development (HUD), violate the Clean Air Act’s asbestos
requirements, and commit bribery. Asbestos is a mineral fiber that has been used
commonly in a variety of building construction materials. When
asbestos-containing materials are damaged or disturbed by repair, remodeling or
demolition activities, microscopic fibers become airborne and can be inhaled
into the lungs, where they can cause serious health
problems.
"It is reprehensible that a public official
made asbestos
abatement decisions based on a bribe, not on what was needed to protect
the health of the community,” said Randall Ashe, special agent in charge of
EPA’s criminal enforcement program in Michigan. “The sentence shows that
government officials who attempt to line their pockets rather than carry out
their responsibilities honestly will be prosecuted to the full extent to the
law.”
“Any public official, in city or suburb, who
works to enrich himself at the expense of the public will be detected and
prosecuted,” U.S. Attorney Barbara L. McQuade said. “It is particularly
disturbing when an official not only takes bribes but also endangers community
health and the environment by allowing the bribes to influence abatement
decisions.”
Morgan’s criminal conduct involved the awarding
of a contract and distribution of federal funds that were intended to be used by
communities for the improvement of blighted areas by removing dilapidated
buildings. The funding was received through HUD’s Neighborhood Stabilization
Program (NSP). Morgan, in addition to being Township supervisor, was also Royal
Oak’s coordinator for NSP.
Prior to the awarding of the contract, Morgan
had received a $10,000 bribe from Sureguard/PBM, one of the companies that
submitted a bid for the demolition and asbestos removal of an abandoned theater
on Eight Mile road. In return for the bribe, Morgan attempted to steer the
contract to Sureguard/PBM. Despite Morgan’s efforts, Royal Oak’s Board of
Supervisors awarded the contract to another company, which had submitted a lower
bid.
During the demolition
process, Morgan asked for and received cash payments of $500 and $1,000 from the
owner of the company that had won the contract. Morgan received these payments
under the belief that they were in return for his approval of a change order
covering the asbestos abatement that fraudulently inflated the cost of the work.
One of Morgan’s co-conspirators,
Terrance Parker, received a sentence of 21 months. Two other co-conspirators,
Kendrick Covington and Marcus Brown have yet to be
sentenced.
The case was investigated by special agents of
the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), HUD’s Office of the Inspector General
and EPA’s Criminal Investigation Division.
More information about EPA’s criminal enforcement
program: http://www.epa.gov/oecaerth/criminal/index.html.
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