In a settlement with the federal government, Forrester
Construction Co., Rockville, Md., has agreed to pay $2.15 million to resolve a
criminal probe into alleged fraud concerning the firm’s use of small
disadvantaged businesses on more than $145 million in contracts with the
District of Columbia.
Under a non-prosecution agreement, which federal
officials announced on Dec. 15, Forrester admitted that it failed to abide by
D.C.’s regulations concerning Certified Business Enterprises or CBEs.
The government said the agreement ends a two-year probe
of Forrester and CBEs with which it worked on the projects.
Attorneys for Forrester did not respond immediately to
ENR's requests for comment on Dec. 16.
Forrester ranked No. 319 on ENR's latest Top 400
Contractors list, down from No. 173 on last year's list.
The federal officials said that along with its payment,
Forrester also agreed to take steps to ensure it complies with D.C. and federal
requirements for small disadvantaged firms.
According to federal officials, in a statement of facts
to which Forrester agreed, the firm and EEC of D.C. Inc., a local CBE, had
formed joint ventures on several projects.
According to the government, the contracting team said in
its filings with the D.C. government that EEC was the majority partner of the
joint venture, with a 51% interest, and thus would be eligible for 51% of the
profits on the jobs.
The EEC-Forrester teams won three D.C. contracts: a
$64-million headquarters for the D.C. Dept. of Employment Services; a
$5.4-million senior wellness center; and a $56-million Anacostia High School
renovation and modernization.
According to the government's press release, the joint
venture “received the maximum amount of contracting preferences for which the
CBE partner was eligible,” which gave the team “a competitive advantage” in
bidding.
But after the D.C. government certified the joint
venture, Forrester and EEC signed “Action of Management” memoranda or a letter
agreement that “effectively increased” Forrester’s control over project
operations and cut EEC’s share of the profits.
The federal officials said Forrester and EEC did not
disclose the memos or letter agreement to D.C. government officials during the
contract procurements.
U.S. Attorney for D.C. Ronald C. Machen Jr. said in a
statement, “Forrester entered secret side deals that wrested control of those
contracts away from their historically under-represented partners and
undermined the purpose of the CBE program.”
In 2013, Forrester reached an agreement with the D.C
government to accept $1 million less than it had requested on the Anacostia
High School project because the D.C. officials said the firm had misrepresented
its work with EEC on that job and two others.
Forrester told ENR in a statement last year, “The
theories and allegations raised were decidedly without merit.”
Source: ENR.com
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