By: Stefano Esposito & Mitch Dudek, Chicago Sun-Times: May 2nd, 2014
Tripped up by a whistleblower, clout-heavy firm McHugh Construction has agreed to pay $12 million in fines to resolve a case involving alleged fraud on government programs intended to benefit women and minority-owned subcontractors, according to the U.S. Department of Justice.
In a separate agreement, the company, James McHugh Construction, has agreed to donate $2 million to the city to support such government programs, Mayor Rahm Emanuel’s office announced Thursday.
Ryan Keiser was hired in 2006 as a project manager for a subcontracting firm owned by a woman. At a news conference Thursday, he said that all he ended up managing was paperwork. He said he alerted the government after he was fired in early 2007 after asking too many questions.
In the settlement, federal prosecutors allege McHugh Construction failed to follow federal and state rules about the participation of minority and women-owned businesses. McHugh used two such businesses to successfully land state and city contracts for work done between 2004 and 2011, but those subcontractors allegedly did little to no work.
“Rather than managing and supervising the work, [the subcontractors’] project managers generally processed paperwork, such as invoices and payroll,” according to the settlement.
The woman-owned subcontracting firm was necessary window dressing to obtain government contracts, said Mike Kanovitz, an attorney with Loevy & Loevy who represented Keiser.
McHugh admitted no wrongdoing in the settlement.