Environmental  Crimes  Case  Bulletin
                    U.S. Environmental Protection Agency
            Office of Criminal Enforcement, Forensics and Training


                       September/October 2013


 This bulletin summarizes publicized investigative activity and adjudicated cases con-
 ducted by OCEFT Criminal Investigation Division special agents, forensic specialists,
 and legal support staff.


Defendants in this edition:

• Maracle Industrial Finishing, Jon Maltese — Region 2

• Martin S. Kimber— Region 2

• William L. Huntress, Acquest Development, LLC, Acquest Transit, LLC — Region 2

• Lambros Katsipis — Region 3

• Billy J. Avery — Region 3

• Patrick Henry Procino — Region 3

• Steven A. Murray, Bio Tech Management, Inc. — Region 4

• Jerome Clarence Barnes, Jr., Jared F. Walker— Region 4

• Jose Manuel Cabrera— Region 4

• Scott William Farmer — Region 4

• E Biofuels, Caravan Trading Company, CIMA Green, Craig Ducey, Chad Ducey, Chris Ducey,
  Brian Carmichael, Jeffrey Wilson, Joseph Furando, Evelyn Kitirina Pattison — Region 5

• James L. Hidey — Region 5

• Halliburton Energy Services, Inc., Anthony Badalamenti — Region 6

• Michael J. Vaughn — Region 6

• Matthew Lawrence Bowman — Region 6

• Thomas Villirillo, Jaime Grimsley — Region  7
                                                           EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  1

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                            DEFENDANT SUMMARY:
           REGION
          DEFENDANTS
     CASE TYPE/STATUTES
Region 2
Maracle Industrial Finishing, Jon
Maltese
CWA/Discharging process waste-
water into village sewer system
Region 2
Martin S. Kimber
TSCA/Use of toxic chemical as a
weapon, tampering with con-
sumer products
Region 2
William L. Huntress, Acquest De-
velopment LLC, Acquest Transit
LLC
CWA/Conspiracy, obstruction of
justice, false statement, conceal-
ing material facts, criminal con-
tempt
Region 3
Lambros Katsipis
APPS/Illegal discharges, falsifi-
cation of records, obstruction of
justice
Region 3
                              Billy J. Avery
                                 CAA/Violating the asbestos Na-
                                 tional Emission Standards for
                                 Hazardous Air Pollution
                                 (NESHAP)
                                                                     EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  2

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                           DEFENDANT SUMMARY:
           REGION
         DEFENDANTS
      CASE TYPE/STATUTES
Region
Patrick Henry Procino
RCRA & CWA/Illegal discharge of
hazardous waste without a permit
and illegal discharge industrial
wastewater
Region 4
                              Steven A. Murray, Bio Tech Man-
                              agement Inc.
                                FIFRA/Unlawful use of a pesticide,
                                conspiracy, falsifying records, false
                                statements, mail fraud
Region 4
Jerome Clarence Barnes, Jr., Tared
F. Walker
CAA/Fraudulent issuance of auto
emission certificates
Region 4
Jose Manuel Cabrera
CAA/Conduction of false vehicle
emission inspections
Region 4
Scott William Farmer
CAA/Knowing violation of work
practices governing hazardous air
pollutants and knowing endanger-
ment by release of hazardous air
pollutants
Region 5
James L. Hidey
CWA/Illegal discharge of well-
drilling waste into river tributary
                                                                     EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  3

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                            DEFENDANT SUMMARY:
           REGION
          DEFENDANTS
     CASE TYPE/STATUTES
Region 5
E Biofuels, Caravan Trading Com-
pany, CIMA Green, Craig Ducey,
Chad Ducey, Chris Ducey, Brian
Carmichael, Jeffrey Wilson, Joseph
Furando, Evelyn Katirina Pattison
CAA/Conspiracy, wire fraud,
false tax claims, false statements,
obstruction of justice, money
laundering, securities fraud
Region 6
Halliburton Energy Services, Inc.,
Anthony Badalamenti
CWA/Destruction of evidence
Region 6
Michael J. Vaughn
SDWA/Making false statements,
conspiring to defraud EPA, ille-
gally disposing of industrial
wastewater
Region 6
Matthew Lawrence Bowman
OSHA/Violating OSHA, making
false statement, falsifying trans-
portation document
Region 7
Thomas Villirillo, Jaime Grimsley
Bid rigging kick back scheme
                                                                    EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  4

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 Quick Links:
 •                                p. 5 - 13
 •                                p. 14 -  16
 •                                p. 17 -  20
                             Sentendngs (Back to Quick Links)
New York Plating Company and Its General Manager Sentenced for Violating the Clean Air Act —
                                             I On September 11, 2013,  MARACLE INDUSTRIAL
                                             FINISHING, located in Webster, New York, and Gen-
                                             eral Manager JON MALTESE, of Canandaigua, New
                                             York, were sentenced  in federal district court for the
                                             Western District of New York  for violating the Clean
                                             Water Act. The  corporation was  sentenced  to  three
                                             years probation and was ordered to pay a $10,000 fine,
                                             while Maltese was also placed on probation for three
                                             years, ordered to pay a $4,000 fine,  and ordered to com-
                                             plete 80 hours of community service.  In addition, Tho-
                                             ' mas Maracle, president of Maracle Finishing, was or-
                                             dered to establish a company-wide  environmental com-
                                             pliance program,  which includes  training employees
                                             about the  Clean Water Act. Maracle and his successors
                                             will be responsible for ensuring and certifying that the
                                             company remains in compliance with that plan.
                                                    Maracle Industrial Finishing worked with phos-
                                             phorus and chromium  products used in the metal and
                                             powder production industry. The company operates out
                                             of an industrial building in Webster which has an area
                                             with  dipping tanks and a painting area. The dipping
                                             tanks are  filled with various chemical solutions and
                                             parts are dipped into each one  in  sequence.  The parts
                                              are then  rinsed with  other cleaning  agents  over  the
                                              tanks. The tanks sit atop a drain system which empties
                                              into a holding pit  where the material is stored for later
                                              disposal. The pit contains a sump pump which is con-
                                              nected directly to the outside sewer line, and this sewer
                                              connects  directly  to the  Webster Publically  Owned
                                              Treatment Works  (POTW),  which in turn connects to
                                              Lake Ontario,  a  navigable  waterway  of the United
                                              States.
                                                    Maracle operated under a Zero Discharge Per-
                                              mit that was issued by the town of Webster beginning
                                             in January 2010. Under the  permit, Maracle Finishing
Inside Maracle Industrial Finishing showing the process
              lines and rinse tanks
was not allowed to discharge any process wastewater,
                                                                      EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  5

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only sanitary waste (for example - water
coming from sinks, toilets, and  showers).
Maracle Finishing and John Maltese vio-
lated this Zero Discharge Permit by repeat-
edly discharging  process wastewater into
the sewer system from the facility.
       Concerning the investigation, water
samples taken from Maracle Finishing in
late 2011 tested positive for a wide array
of process waste-water, including volatile
and semi-volatile organics.  Officials ob-
tained samples taken from a sewer directly
outside  Maracle  which  connected  the
building to the POTW. These showed that
not only was Maracle discharging process
wastewater,  which violated  its Zero Dis-
charge Permit,  but also that  some of the
wastewater itself posed an explosive haz-
Metal finishing process waste water and pollutants were directly
  discharged into the sewer system/drains from overflows and
      direct discharges from the pit area shown above.
ard due to its low flashpoint. Lab analysis of the wastewater showed a 40.3 degree Celsius flashpoint in vio-
lation of POTW limits. The village of Webster's POTW doesn't take any wastewater discharges below a 60
degree Celsius  flashpoint because the lower flashpoint has an increased risk of explosion  or fire at lower
temperatures and is more dangerous.
       Webster officials and investigators with the Environmental Protection Agency Criminal Investigation
Division and the New York State Department of Environmental  Conservation went to Maracle on several
occasions  to check for discharges at the sewer  outside the company. A manhole directly outside Maracle
permitted  easy  inspection of water leaving the facility  and entering the POTW  system. At virtually every
visit, officials were able to see process wastewater leaving Maracle's building and flowing into the POTW in
violation of the Zero Discharge Permit. They confronted General Manager John Maltese, who always denied
discharging anything other than bathroom water. However, during several of these visits they saw a sump
pump running in plain sight which was discharging process wastewater from the holding pit area. Workers
interviewed during the investigation confirmed that Maltese would order them to turn the discharge pumps
on to drain the chemicals in the holding pit.
       EPA executed a federal search warrant in March 2012 and conducted extensive testing and analysis.
Dye testing was performed to confirm that the material from the  holding pit was the same  material as that
being discharged into the POTW line outside. Samples from the  dipping tanks, holding pit, and paint area
were also obtained and tested.
       The case was investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division, the New York State Depart-
ment of Environmental Conservation Police, BECI, and the village of Webster Department of Public Works.
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Kansas Men Sentenced in Bid-Rigging Kickback Scheme - On September 9, 2013, THOMAS VIL-
LIRILLO, of Olathe, Kansas, and JAIME GRIMSLEY, of Overland Park, Kansas, were each sentenced
in federal district court for the Western District of Missouri  to five years of probation. Villirillio was also
ordered to pay $105,560 in restitution and Grimsley to pay $79,167 in restitution. Villirillo pleaded  guilty
on January 3,  2013,to participating in a conspiracy to commit mail fraud. Villirillo was the owner of Reliable
Construction,  which fulfilled construction contracts  for CRES Management. Between  June 2008 and May
2009, Villirillo conspired to pay approximately $105,560 in kickbacks to co-conspirators Christopher Grim-
sley, of Overland Park (Jaime Grimsley's husband), and Jo Den Napper, of Lenexa, Kansas.
       Christopher Grimsley and Napper were directors of construction for Aimco (and, later, CRES Man-
agement) and in charge of procuring bids for renovating apartment complexes. In exchange for these kick-
backs, Christopher Grimsley and Napper agreed to  rig bids in  Villirillo's favor without the knowledge of
Aimco or CRES Management. Among other things, Villirillo used his credit card to pay for hotel accommo-
dations in Las Vegas for Grimsley and his wife, Jaime Grimsley, in exchange for granting his bids to com-
plete construction work.
       On May 2, 2013, Jaime Grimsley pleaded guilty to filing false tax returns. Jaime Grimsley formed
Geronimo Consultants in 2004, which she admitted was used to deposit kickback payments to her husband,
Christopher Grimsley, from various building contractors. Between 2005 and 2008, the Grimsleys filed false
tax returns omitting kickback income of $217,981, for a tax loss of $79,167. Christopher Grimsley was sen-
tenced on March 28, 2011, to 41 months in federal prison without parole and ordered to  pay $538,340 in res-
titution after pleading guilty  to mail fraud. Between May 2003 and May 2009, Christopher Grimsley ac-
cepted approximately $538,340 in kickbacks from various contractors in the Kansas City area. In exchange
for these kickbacks, he agreed to rig bids in favor of the contractors without the knowledge of Aimco.
       Napper, who pleaded guilty to mail fraud, was sentenced on August 28, 2013,  to one year and one
day in federal prison without parole. Between August 2004 and May 2009, Napper accepted approximately
$355,749 in kickbacks from various contractors. In exchange  for these kickbacks, Napper agreed to rig bids
in favor of the contractors without the knowledge of CRES Management.
       Tim Rowland, of Platte City, pleaded guilty to his role in the mail  fraud conspiracy  and was sen-
tenced on March 30,  2013, to five years of probation and ordered to pay $298,765 in  restitution. Rowland
was the owner of ATNJ, a construction company that fulfilled contracts for Aimco Apartment Management.
Between November 2004 and May 2009, Rowland conspired to pay approximately $298,765 in kickbacks to
Christopher Grimsley and Napper.
       Chris Childers, of Olathe,  pleaded guilty to his role in the mail fraud conspiracy and was sentenced
on July 23, 2013, to one year of probation and ordered to pay $179,570 in restitution. Childers was the
owner of All  State Renovations,  which fulfilled construction contracts for CRES  Management. Between
May 2004 and April 2009, Childers conspired to pay approximately $179,570 in kickbacks to Grimsley and
Napper. In exchange for these kickbacks, they agreed to rig bids in Childers's favor without the knowledge
of CRES Management.
       Bernie Belcher, of Olathe, pleaded guilty to his role in the mail fraud conspiracy and was sentenced
on July 30, 2013, to five years of probation and ordered to pay $201,223  in  restitution. Belcher was the
owner of All  State Roofing, which fulfilled construction contracts for Aimco Apartment Management. Be-
tween May 2003 and May 2009, Belcher conspired to pay approximately  $201,224 in kickbacks to Grimsley
and Napper. In exchange for these kickbacks, they agreed to rig bids in Belcher's favor without the knowl-
edge of Aimco.
       These  cases were investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division and the U.S. Department of
Housing and Urban Development, Office of Inspector General. They were prosecuted by Assistant U.S. At-
torneys Linda Parker Marshall and William L. Meiners.
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                                                                       EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  7

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Halliburton Pleads Guilty to Destruction of Evidence in Connection with Deepwater Horizon Disas-
ter and is  Sentenced to Statutory Maximum Fine -- On September 19, 2013, HALLIBURTON EN-
ERGY SERVICES, INC., (Halliburton) pleaded guilty in federal district court for the Eastern District of
Louisiana to destroying evidence pertaining to the 2010 Deepwater Horizon disaster and was sentenced to
the statutory maximum fine.  In addition, a criminal information was also filed charging a former Hallibur-
ton manager, ANTHONY BADALAMENTI, of Katy, Texas, with one count of destruction of evidence.
       During the guilty plea and  sentencing proceeding, the judge
found, among other things, that the sentence appropriately  reflects
Halliburton's offense conduct. The judge also noted that the statutory
maximum fine and three year probationary period provide just pun-
ishment and  appropriate deterrence, and  noted  Halliburton's self-
reporting of the misconduct, substantial and  valuable cooperation in
the government's investigation, and substantial efforts to recover the
deleted data.
       According to court documents, on April 20, 2010, while sta-
tioned at the Macondo well  site in the Gulf of Mexico, the Deepwater
Horizon rig experienced an uncontrolled blowout and related explosions and fire, which resulted in  the
deaths of 11 rig workers and the largest oil spill in U.S. history. Following the blowout, Halliburton con-
ducted its own review of various technical aspects of the well's design and construction.  On or about May
3, 2010, Halliburton established an  internal working group to examine the Macondo well blowout, includ-
ing whether the number of centralizers used on the  final production casing could have contributed to  the
blowout.  A production casing is a long, heavy metal pipe set across the area of the oil and natural gas res-
ervoir. Centralizers are metal devices that protrude  from various intervals of the casing strings of a well,
which can help keep the casing centered in the wellbore away from the surrounding walls as it is lowered
and placed in the well. Centralization can be significant to the quality of subsequent cementing around  the
bottom of the casing. Prior to the blowout, Halliburton had recommended to BP the use of 21 centralizers
in the Macondo well. BP opted to use six centralizers instead.
       As detailed variously in the charging instruments filed against Halliburton  and against Badala-
menti, during the  relevant time period Badalamenti  was Halliburton's  cementing technology director.  In
May 2010, in connection with Halliburton's internal  post-incident examination of the Macondo well,
Badalamenti directed a senior program  manager for Halliburton's Cement Product Line (Program Man-
ager) to run two computer simulations of the Macondo well final  cementing job using Halliburton's Dis-
place 3D simulation program. Displace 3D was a next-generation simulation program that was being  de-
veloped to model fluid interfaces and their movement through the wellbore  and annulus of a well. The
modeling sought to compare the  21 centralizers Halliburton had recommended to BP versus the six cen-
tralizers BP ultimately used.  As detailed in the charging documents, the simulations indicated to those pre-
sent that there was little difference  between using six and 21  centralizers on the Macondo well.  Badala-
menti directed Program Manager to destroy these results, and Program Manager did so.
       On or about June 2010, similar evidence was also destroyed in a later incident. Badalamenti asked
another, more  experienced,  employee ("Employee 1") to run simulations again comparing six versus 21
centralizers. Employee 1 reached the same conclusion.  Badalamenti then directed Employee 1 to "get rid
of the simulations, and, after a period of delay, Employee 1  deleted them from his computer. Efforts to
forensically recover the original destroyed Displace 3D  computer simulations during ensuing civil litiga-
tion and federal criminal investigation by the Deepwater Horizon Task Force were unsuccessful.
       Halliburton's guilty plea and sentence, and the criminal charge announced against Badalamenti,  are
part of the ongoing criminal investigation by the Deepwater Horizon Task Force into matters related to  the
April 2010 Gulf oil spill.  The Deepwater Horizon  Task Force, based in New Orleans, is  supervised by
                                                                       EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  8

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Acting Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman and led by John D. Buretta, who serves as the director of
the task force.  The task force includes prosecutors from the Criminal Division and the Environment and
Natural Resources Division of the Department of Justice; the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District
of Louisiana and other U.S. Attorney's Offices; and investigating agents from EPA's Criminal Investigation
Division;  the FBI; Department of the Interior, Office of Inspector General; EPA's Office of Inspector Gen-
eral; National  Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Office of Law Enforcement; U.S. Coast Guard;
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service; and the Louisiana Department of Environmental Quality.
       The case is being prosecuted by Deepwater Horizon Task Force Director Buretta, Deputy Director
William Pericak, and Task Force prosecutors Richard R. Pickens II, Scott M. Cullen, Colin Black and Rohan
Virginkar.
       An information is merely a charge and a defendant is presumed innocent  unless and until proven
guilty beyond a reasonable  doubt.
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New York Man Sentenced to 14 Years in Prison for Chemical Weapon Attack at Medical Center —
On September 19, 2013, MARTIN S. KIMBER, of Ruby, New York, was sentenced in federal district
court for the Northern District of New York to 14 years in prison, five years supervised release thereafter,
                                                           forfeiture of his home and car which were
                                                           used to store mercury, and ordered to pay
                                                           $200,450.48 in restitution to the  Albany
                                                           Medical Center following his guilty plea to
                                                           using a  toxic  chemical,  mercury,  as a
                                                           weapon,  and  tampering  with  consumer
                                                           products at the Albany Medical Center, in
                                                           Albany, New York.  Kimber admitted that
                                                           on four occasions  he spread mercury, a
                                                           potentially  fatal neurotoxin, throughout
                                                           various areas of the Albany Medical Cen-
                                                           ter in ways which could lead to inhalation
                                                           or absorption of the mercury, to retaliate
for what he thought were unfair hospital bills.
       When Kimber entered his guilty plea on November 29, 2012, he admitted that: On  December 10,
2010 and December 23, 2010, he received medical treatment  at the Albany Medical Center.  On  various
dates thereafter, including on January 24,  2011, he wrote to express concern about having  to pay for his
medical care. On February 22, 2011, the Albany Medical Center Associate Medical Director wrote back and
explained why the bills were appropriate,  and discussed the outcome associated with Kimber having pro-
vided inaccurate information about his  injury, and his decision not to complete the care prescribed by his
treating physician.
       On March 28, 2011, April 11, 2011, June 23, 2011, and March 2, 2012, patients, visitors, and hospi-
tal personnel discovered liquid mercury deposited in sundry locations throughout the Albany Medical Cen-
ter.  On March 28, 2011,  mercury was found in  the level D basement, the hallway outside  the  Post-
Operative Care Unit,  the triage window in  the emergency room, and in the tracks to the door of the cen-
ter elevator  for Building D Hospital; emergency response units identified and collected several pounds of
mercury. On April 11, 2011, mercury was found in the men's bathroom on the AI level and in the main hall-
way in Building E, extending from the M doors to the elevator lobby. Approximately one to two pounds of
mercury was collected by emergency response personnel. On June 23, 2011, mercury was found on the pe-

                                                                        EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  9

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destrian ramp leading from the main lobby up to the pedestrian parking garage bridge and in the E-l corridor
exiting the Choice Cafe and the center elevator of Building A elevator triplex.  Approximately two pounds of
mercury was collected. On March 2, 2012, mercury was found in the cafeteria at Albany Medical Center, in
the salad bar, in an apple bowl, in a banana basket, in a toaster, on a table by the coffee station, in the cooler
for the packaged salad dressing, in the ice cream freezer,  and in a container of chicken tenders that were be-
ing warmed under heating lamps and were available for purchase and consumption by cafeteria customers.
       Kimber admitted he was responsible for each of these mercury disposals, and for tampering with the
described products, including the mercury, each item of food, and the restaurant equipment, to include salad,
fruit, toaster, table, cooler, freezer, and heating lamps. The food products and food containers into and near
which the defendant deposited mercury affected interstate commerce. Kimber further admitted his purpose in
disposing of the mercury throughout the Albany Medical  Center on multiple occasions was to cause panic at
the hospital  leading to the closing down of the facility by causing a loss of business when people became
fearful of gaining treatment and eating there.
       On March 29, 2012, a search by law enforcement  officers revealed that Kimber possessed two canis-
ters of mercury, one stored in his car and the other stored in his house. Both canisters of mercury were seized
by the officers. An FBI search of his computer showed that he engaged in searches at sites where more mer-
cury could be purchased.
       Mercury is a well-documented hazardous substance.  Among other  things, mercury is a neurotoxin
that can kill human nerve cells.  Mercury is readily absorbed through unbroken skin. Inhalation and other
forms of absorption can lead to death, brain and lung damage, impairment of speech, constriction of the vis-
ual field, hearing loss and somatosensory change, and other serious bodily  injuries. Having been a licensed
pharmacist for 36 years, Kimber well understood these dangers, and that the  heating of mercury, including
the placing of mercury on or in toasters, and on or around heated food, greatly increased the likelihood that
mercury would vaporize into the air and  be inhaled by individuals consuming such  food or using or near
such heating devices.
       As part of his sentence, Kimber was ordered to abandon his computer in which child
pornography was found and further ordered to: Pay restitution to the Albany Medical Center in the amount of
$200,451.48; pay restitution in full to the United  States  for any expenses incurred incident to the seizure,
storage, handling, transportation, and destruction of any property seized  in connection with an investigation
of his use of mercury as a chemical weapon; forfeit his residence at 8 Lena Lane, Ruby,  New York; and for-
feit his 2007 Pontiac Solstice.
       Kimber was arrested on April 25, 2012, by EPA Special Agents. On March 2, 2012, following  a hear-
ing, Kimber was detained as a danger to the community.  He was ordered to remain in jail following imposi-
tion of sentence.
       The case was investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division, the Federal Bureau of Investiga-
tion, and the Food & Drug Administration Office of Criminal Investigations.  Assistance has been provided
by the towns of Albany and Ulster police  departments. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Craig Bene.
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                                                                        EPA Bulletin September/October 2013   10

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Former Operations Manager in Louisiana Sentenced for Corporate Fraud and  SDWA Violations -
On October 24, 2013, MICHAEL J. VAUGHN, of Addis, Louisiana, was sentenced in federal district court
for the Middle District of Louisiana to 12 months incarceration at a federal half-way house, a five year term
of probation, forfeiture of approximately $23,000,  and restitution to the victims in an amount to be deter-
mined.
       The sentence is the result of Vaughn's
pleading guilty to making false  statements
within the jurisdiction of the federal govern-
ment, conspiring to defraud the U.S. Environ-
mental Protection  Agency and to violate the
Safe Drinking  Water Act. Such convictions
stem from actions he took while serving as the
Operations Manager  of  FAS  Environmental
Services, a transportation and disposal  com-
pany based in Belle River, Louisiana. In that
role, the defendant oversaw all operations and
employees at the company.
       While working as the FAS Operations
Manager, the defendant took over $22,000 in
kickbacks during 2011 and 2012 from a waste-
water brokerage firm in exchange for illegally
 Aerial photograph of the overall well site at FAS with living quarters
 and a barge parked at the dock. Barges ferried wastewater from the
FAS transfer station to the well site for disposal into the injection well
using an FAS injection well in Belle River to dispose of over 380,000 gallons of industrial wastewater in
violation of the federal Safe Water Drinking Act. As part of the scheme, the defendant and his fellow con-
spirators created and used over 100 false documents, including manifests and work orders, in addition to
submitting false reports to regulators in Baton Rouge. Such false and fraudulent documents were designed to
conceal the scheme from federal and state government officials and the brokerage firm's unsuspecting cli-
ents.
                                                           FAS ownership was unaware of Vaughn's
                                                     scheme, which resulted in the misuse of FAS re-
                                                     sources to the sole benefit of the defendant person-
                                                     ally and his fellow conspirators. FAS has cooper-
                                                     ated fully throughout the investigation and termi-
                                                     nated  the  defendant's employment with the com-
                                                     pany upon learning of the scheme.
                                                           This ongoing investigation is being con-
                                                     ducted by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division,
                                                     the Middle District of Louisiana's District Attor-
                                                     ney's  Office, and the Criminal Investigation Divi-
                                                     sion  of the Louisiana Department  of Environ-
                                                     mental Quality.  The case  is being prosecuted by
                                                     Assistant U.S. Attorney Corey R. Amundson who
                                                     serves as the Senior Deputy Chief of the Criminal
 The underground injection well operated by FAS. This is a Class
II well, permitted by Louisiana Department of Natural Resources.
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                                                                        EPA Bulletin September/October 2013   11

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Former President of Texas Chemical Company Sentenced for Federal Crimes Related to Employee
Deaths - On October 28, 2013, MATTHEW LAWRENCE BOWMAN, of Houston, Texas, the former
president of Port Arthur Chemical and Environmental Services, LLC (PACES), was sentenced in federal dis-
                                        I trict court for the Eastern District of Texas for occupational
                                        safety crimes which resulted in the death of an employee. He
                                        pleaded guilty on May  9, 2013, to violating the Occupational
                                        Safety and Health Act and making a false statement and was
                                        sentenced to serve 12 months in federal prison.  He was also
                                        | ordered to pay fines in the amount of $5,000.
                                               Bowman admitted  to not properly protecting PACES
                                        I employees from exposure to hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous gas
                                        | resulting in the death of truck driver Joey Sutler on December
                                        18, 2008. In addition, Bowman admitted to directing employ-
Port Arthur Chemical and Environmental Services                        .                       , ,
                                        ees to falsify transportation  documents to conceal that the
wastewater was coming from PACES after a disposal facility put a moratorium on all shipments from
PACES after it received loads containing hydrogen sulfide.
       According to information presented in court, Bowman was president and owner of PACES, located
in Port Arthur, Texas, and CES Environmental Services (CES) located in Houston. PACES were in  opera-
tion from November 2008 to November 2010,  and were in the business of producing and selling caustic ma-
terials to  paper mills.  The production of caustic materials involved hydrogen sulfide, a poisonous gas.  Ac-
cording to the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, hydrogen sulfide is an acute toxic sub-
stance that is the leading cause of sudden death in the workplace.  Employers are required by OSHA to im-
plement engineering  and safety controls to prevent employees from
exposure above harmful limits of hydrogen sulfide.
       Bowman was responsible for approving and directing PACES
production operations, the disposal of hydrogen sulfide wastewater,
and ensuring implementation of employee safety precautions. In some
cases, Bowman personally handled the investigation of work-related
employee injuries, directed the transportation  of PACES wastewater,
and determined what safety equipment could  be purchased or main-
tained.  In the cases at issue, hazardous materials were transported il-      CES Environmental Services
legally with false  documents and without the required placards.  Most importantly,  the workers were not
properly protected from exposure to hazardous gases. The exposure resulted in the deaths of two employees,
Joey Sutler and Charles Sittig, who were truck drivers, at  the PACES  facility on December 18, 2008 and
April 14, 2009. Placarding is critical to ensure the safety of first  responders in the event of an accident or
other highway incident. Bowman and PACES  were indicted by a federal grand jury on July 18, 2012.
       This case was investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division; the U.S. Department of Trans-
portation Office of Inspector General;  the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality - Environmental
Crimes Unit, part of the Texas Environmental  Enforcement Task Force; the Texas Parks & Wildlife Depart-
ment -  Environmental Crimes Unit; the Houston Police Department - Major Offenders, Environmental In-
vestigations Unit;  the Travis County, Texas - District Attorney's Office; the Harris County, Texas, District
Attorney's Office Environmental  Crimes Division; the Houston Fire Department; OSHA;  the U.S. Coast
Guard; the Port Arthur Police Department; and the Port Arthur Fire Department.  It was prosecuted  by the
U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District  of Texas and the Environmental Crimes Section of the Justice
Department's Environment and Natural Resources Division.
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                                                                      EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  12

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North Carolina Man Sentenced to 12 Months in Prison for Vehicle Emissions Fraud — On September
25, 2013, JOSE  MANUEL CABRERA, of Charlotte, North Carolina, was sentenced in federal district
court for the Western District of North Carolina to 12 months in prison for conducting false vehicle  emis-
sion inspections.  He was also ordered to serve three years under court supervision following the prison
term with the condition that he will not obtain a license to or actually conduct any vehicle emissions testing.
Cabrera was also ordered to pay a $10,000 fine and to complete 100 hours of community service.
       According to court records, Cabrera worked at Carolina Tire & Auto service center in Pineville, as a
mechanic and a vehicle emissions inspector licensed by the state of North Carolina.   As a state-licensed
emissions inspector, Cabrera tested vehicles to ensure they met federally-mandated emissions requirements.
Court records  show that from February 2011  to May  2012, and while employed at Carolina Tire, Cabrera
conducted 164 illegal vehicle  emissions inspections  using surrogate vehicles to falsely pass vehicles that
would have failed emissions inspection.  According to court records, Cabrera performed these fraudulent
emissions tests at Carolina Tire by entering into the state database the information of the vehicle that needed
to be tested but then connected the testing equipment to  a vehicle that was either being worked  on at
Carolina Tire or had already been repaired and had not been picked up by the owner. The illegal practice of
utilizing substitute vehicles for emissions testing is referred to in the industry as  "clean scanning."  Court
records indicate that Cabrera charged $60 to clean scan a vehicle.   Carolina Tire's Pineville service center
was suspended from conducting emissions testing for ten years by the North Carolina Department of Motor
Vehicle's License and Theft Bureau.
       Cabrera's  sentence was enhanced because of his criminal history, including membership in the MS-
13 gang.  Cabrera was ordered to self-report to the Federal Bureau of Prisons upon designation of a federal
facility. Federal sentences are served without the possibility of parole.
       Investigation of the case was conducted by the EPA's Criminal Investigation Division,  the North
Carolina State Bureau of Investigation's Division  and  Environmental Crimes Unit and the North Carolina
Department of Motor Vehicle's License and Theft Bureau, with assistance from the North  Carolina  Divi-
sion of  Air  Quality, Mobile  Sources  Compliance Branch.  The prosecution was handled by Assistant
U.S. Attorney  Steven R. Kaufman of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Charlotte.
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                                                                        EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  13

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                           Plea Agreements (Back to Quick Links)
Ship Chief Engineer Found Guilty of Violating APPS and Other Charges -- On September 15, 2013,
LAMBROS KATSIPIS, chief engineer of the M/V Antonis G. Pappadakis, was found guilty in federal dis-
trict court in Norfolk, Virginia, of violating the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships,  falsification of records,
and obstruction of justice violations.  Ship operator Kassian Maritime Navigation  Agency, Ltd.  and  ship
owner Angel ex Ltd. were acquitted of the charges against them.
       The  charges stem from illegal overboard discharges of bilge waste from the M/V Antonis G. Pap-
padakls bypassing pollution prevention equipment.   These discharges were not recorded in the oil  record
book (ORB).  A falsified ORB was used onboard between July 2012 and April 2013 and was presented to
Coast Guard inspectors during boardings.  The defendants were further alleged to have obstructed justice by
instructing crew members not to speak to Coast Guard personnel during the April 2013 boarding.  Sentenc-
ing is set for Dec. 16, 2013. The maximum penalty is a fine of $250,000 per count and a maximum sentence
of 20 years in prison.
       The case was prosecuted by Kenneth Nelson of the Environment and Department of Justice's Natural
Resources Division's Environmental Crimes Section.
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Virginia Businessman Pleads Guilty to Mishandling of Asbestos-Containing Materials — On October
22, 2013, BILLY J. AVERY, of Virginia Beach, Virginia, pleaded guilty to violating the asbestos National
Emission Standards for Hazardous Air Pollution (NESHAP), in violation of the Clean Air Act.  Avery faces
a maximum penalty of five years imprisonment when he is sentenced on January 28, 2014.
                             In a statement of facts filed with the plea agreement, Avery served as the
                      secretary and treasurer of EC&C Environmental (EC&C), an environmental ser-
                      vices company.  Avery operated EC&C out of his residence located on Gulls Quay,
                      Virginia Beach,  Virginia.  In  July 2012, a contractor was retained to demolish the
                      Wayside Motor Inn in Virginia Beach.  Prior to the demolition, the contactor sub-
                      contracted EC&C and Avery to conduct an asbestos inspection of the hotel building
                      to identify the presence and location of asbestos-containing materials (ACM). Dur-
                      ing the inspection, Avery took samples of suspected ACM and provided the samples
to a chemical laboratory in Richmond, Virginia, for analysis.  The  laboratory testing results confirmed the
presence of asbestos-containing materials. The Virginia Department of Labor and Industry issued an asbes-
tos removal permit to EC&C to remove the 1,450 linear feet of regulated asbestos-containing material from
the Wayside Motor Inn.
       While removing and disposing the regulated asbestos-containing ma-
terials from the Wayside Motor Inn, EC&C and Avery did not follow the as-
bestos work practice standards and procedure required under the NESHAPs.
During a meeting with the Chesapeake Deputy Fire Marshal  and a Virginia
Department of Labor and Industry inspector  on February 6, 2013, regarding
dumpsters Avery used in the Wayside Motel and  other projects, Avery admit-
ted that at  least one of the dumpsters contained friable asbestos waste  from
various projects, including the waste from the Wayside Motor Inn.
       The case was investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division, the Chesapeake, Virginia, Fire
Marshal's Office, and the Virginia Department of Environmental Quality. Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph L.
Kosky and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney David Lastra are  prosecuting the case on behalf of the United
States.
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                                                                      EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  14

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Georgia Emissions Inspectors Plead Guilty to Fraudulently Issuing Emissions Certificates — On Sep-
tember 6, 2013,  JEROME CLARENCE BARNES,  JR, and JARED F. WALKER pleaded guilty for
their roles in a scheme to fraudulently issue emissions certificates for cars that would have failed the emis-
sions inspection required by law.
       According to the charges and other information presented in court, Barnes, of Lithia Springs, Geor-
gia, was responsible for issuing over 4,000 fraudulent  emissions certificates to car owners in Georgia from
September 2011 to September 2012, falsely  stating that the owners' cars passed the required emissions
test.  Barnes worked with other individuals to open emissions  inspection stations  in their names that he
would then use to issue fraudulent emissions certificates. Opening stations in others' names helped conceal
Barnes' involvement in the fraudulent activity. He wanted to avoid detection because he previously owned
two  inspection stations that  state authorities had  shut down for fraud.  When authorities would discover
emissions fraud occurring at one of the inspection stations, Barnes continued the fraud at another station that
was  opened under the name  of a different owner.  During the scheme, Barnes used On Time Emissions in
Fulton County, All Clean Emissions in Cobb County, BDH Emissions in Dekalb County, Elite Emissions in
Fulton County,  and Cleaner Atlanta Emissions in  Cobb  County, to conduct fraudulent emissions test-
ing.  Walker, of Austell, Georgia, owned All Clean Emissions.
       Tared F. Walker and co-defendants lekaN. Jones, of Winston,  Georgia, and Seretha Franklin, of Ac-
worth,  Georgia, were licensed emissions inspectors who worked with Barnes to issue  passing emissions cer-
tificates to car owners whose cars would have otherwise failed the emissions test.  Instead of connecting the
owners' real cars to the emissions equipment, the defendants connected different cars they knew would pass
the test.  During the tests, the  computer system automatically transmitted emissions testing data to a state-
wide database accessible by the Georgia Environmental Protection Division. The defendants  manually en-
tered other information into the system, such as the make, model, and vehicle identification number, to make
it appear that they were testing the owners' real cars, many of which had already failed an emissions test or
showed equipment malfunctions. The defendants charged $100 to $125 for a fraudulent emissions test, far
more than the usual amount charged for a legitimate inspection.  Georgia law prohibits inspection stations
from charging more than $25 for an emissions test.
       Barnes pleaded  guilty to one count of conspiring to commit wire fraud by depriving the state of Geor-
gia and its citizens of their right to his honest services as a licensed emissions inspector.  Walker pleaded
guilty to one count of violating the Clean Air Act.  The conspiracy charge against Barnes carries a maximum
sentence of 5 years in prison.  The Clean Air Act charge against Walker carries a maximum sentence of 2
years in prison.  Each charge carries a fine of up to $250,000.  In determining the actual sentence, the Court
will  consider the United States Sentencing Guidelines, which are not binding but provide appropriate sen-
tencing ranges for most offenders.
       Sentencing is scheduled for November 22, 2013. The indictment charging Jones and Franklin with
conspiracy and Clean Air Act violations remains pending.
       The case  is being investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division and the Georgia Department
of Natural Resources, Environmental Protection Division.  It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Stephen H. McClain.
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                                                                        EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  15

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Delaware Man Enters Guilty Plea for RCRA and CWA Violations - On October 15, 2013, PATRICK
HENRY PROCINO, of Laurel, Delaware, pled guilty in federal district court for the District of Delaware to
one count of illegal storage of hazardous waste without a permit in violation of the Resource Conservation
and Recovery Act.  The violation is punishable by five years incarceration, a $250,000 fine, and three years
supervised release. As the owner/operator of Procino Plating, Inc., Procino also entered a guilty plea on be-
half of that corporation to one count of violating the Clean Water Act, which subjects the corporation to a
maximum fine of $500,000 and five years probation. Sentencing is scheduled for February 27, 2014.
                                                                          According  to   statements
                                                                  I made at the plea hearing and docu-
                                                                   ments  filed  in  court,  Procino
                                                                   owned and operated Procino Plat-
                                                                   ing, Inc. in Blades, Delaware. Un-
                                                                   til the fall of 2007, the facility was
                                                                   utilized for plating and electroplat-
                                                                   ing-related operations.  From  De-
                                                                   cember 2007 through May 2010,
                                                                   Procino  stored a tank containing
                                                                   approximately 450  gallons  of liq-
                                                                   uid hazardous waste which origi-
                                                                   nally had been used at the facility
                                                                   on its decorative chrome plating
                                                                   line. This chemical waste  had  a ph
                                                                   of 0.8 and, therefore, was a corro-
                                                                   sive waste under RCRA.
                                                                          Procino Plating, Inc. in the
                                                                    course of its operations, produced
Inside Procino Plating, Inc.
wastewater and pursuant to a pretreatment industrial wastewater permit issued by Sussex County, was per-
mitted to discharge its industrial wastewater to the Seaford, Delaware, treatment plant which, in turn, dis-
charges into the Nanticoke River. Pursuant to the Clean Water Act, the permit set limits on the amount of
various pollutants that Procino Plating could discharge in its industrial wastewater to the Seaford treatment
plant, including limits on various metals.
On or about June 1, 2009,  Sussex County modified Procino Plating's industrial user permit to specifically
prohibit the discharge of wastewater generated as a result of electroplating operations,  and any waste or bi-
products of the electroplating processes then in storage at the facility. This modification was made based
upon statements and representations by Procino Plating to Sussex County officials, indicating that the busi-
ness has ceased electroplating-related operations at the facility. However, from June 2009 through March
2010, Procino Plating processed, through its wastewater treatment  plant,  stored drums of chemicals which
were leftover from  its former electroplating operations and, in violation of its Clean Water Act mandated
permit, discharged resulting wastewater to the Seaford treatment plant.
       The case was investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation  Division and the  Department of Natural
Resources and Environmental Control, Criminal Investigations. It was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Edmond Falgowski  and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Lisa.
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                                                                        EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  16

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                        Indictments/Informations
Alabama Pest Control Company and Its Owner Charge with Unlawful Application of Pesticides and
Falsification -- On September 11, 2013, STEVEN A. MURRAY, of Pelham, Alabama, and his company,
BIO-TECH MANAGEMENT, INC., a pest control services company, were charged in federal district
court for the Middle District of Georgia in a felony indictment with one count of conspiracy, 10 counts of
making false statements, 20 counts of falsifying records, 10 counts of mail fraud and 10 counts of unlawful
use of a pesticide.
       The indictment alleges that from October 2005 to June 2009, Murray and Bio-Tech repeatedly mis-
applied the registered pesticide Termidor SC in nursing homes in the state of Georgia and falsified docu-
ments to  conceal the unlawful use.  The indictment further alleges that Murray and Bio-Tech sent  invoices
through the U.S. Mail to their nursing home clients  to solicit payment for the unlawful pesticide applica-
tions.
       According to the indictment, Murray and Bio-Tech provided monthly pest control services to nurs-
ing homes in Georgia by spraying  pesticides in and around their clients' facilities.  The indictment alleges
that, at the direction of Murray, Bio-Tech employees routinely applied the pesticide Termidor indoors more
than twice a year, contrary to the manufacturer's label instructions. The indictment further alleges that after
the Georgia Department of Agriculture made inquiries regarding Bio-Tech's misuse of Termidor and other
pesticides, Murray directed several of his Bio-Tech employees to alter company service reports with the in-
tent to obstruct an investigation.
       A criminal indictment is not a finding of guilt. An individual or company charged by  criminal in-
dictment  is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law.  The falsifying records and
mail fraud charge carry a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and $250,000 fine per count. The false
statements  charges each carry a  maximum sentence  of five  years in prison  and a $250,000 fine.
       The case is being investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigations Division in Atlanta and prosecuted
by Trial Attorneys Richard J. Powers and Adam C. Cullman of the Justice Department's Environment and
Natural Resources Division, Environmental Crimes Section.
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South Carolina Man Indicted on Hazardous Air Pollution Violations - On October 17, 2013, SCOTT
WILLIAM FARMER, of Anderson, South Carolina, was charged in federal district court for the District of
South Carolina with knowing violation of work practices governing hazardous air pollutants and knowing
endangerment by release of hazardous air pollutants. The maximum penalty he could receive is 15 years
imprisonment and a maximum fine of $250,000.
       The case was investigated by EPA's Criminal Enforcement Division and the Department of Health
and Environmental  Control of South Carolina. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jamie Lea
Nabors Schoen of the Greenville, South Carolina, office. All charges in this indictment are merely accusa-
tions and defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.
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                                                                      EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  17

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Ohio Man Charged with Discharging  Well-Drilling Waste into River Tributary- On October 17,
2013, JAMES L. HIDEY, of Dover, Ohio, was charged in federal district court for the Northern District
of Ohio with discharging well drilling waste into Beecher Brook, a tributary of the Chagrin River.
       In 2008 Hidey worked for Great Plains Exploration, an oil and gas well drilling company based in
Northeast Ohio.  On two separate occasions in 2008, Hidey directed the discharge of brine into a stormwa-
ter sewer after the completion of gas wells in Mayfield Heights and Highland Heights.  The brine flowed
from the stormwater sewers into Beecher Brook and eventually into the Chargrin River. Brine is water
with a high quantity of salt dissolved into it and is used during the drilling phase of the well installation. It
must be handled  and disposed of properly because of the toxicity of brine.
       The case  was investigated by EPA's Criminal Investigation Division, the Ohio Bureau of Criminal
Identification and Investigation, and the  Ohio Environmental Protection Agency, all  members of the
Northeast Ohio Environmental Crimes Task Force. It is being prosecuted by Special Assistant U.S. Attor-
ney Brad J. Beeson.  An information is only  a charge and is not evidence of guilt.  A defendant is entitled
to a fair trial in which it will be the government's burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
New York Developer Indicted for Obstruction of Justice - On September 20, 2013, it was announced
that a federal grand jury in the Western District of New York returned a five count indictment charging
WILLIAM L. HUNTRESS, of Buffalo, New York, and two companies he controlled, ACQUEST DE-
VELOPMENT, LLC, and ACQUEST TRANSIT, LLC, with conspiracy to defraud the United States
and obstruction of justice. In addition, Huntress and the companies are charged with making a false state-
ment and concealing material facts, and criminal contempt. The charges carry a maximum penalty of 20
years in prison, a fine of $250,000, or both.
   According to the indictment, in January 2006, the defendants purchased  a 97-acre piece of property in
Amherst, New York.  Prior to the purchase,  the defendants obtained  a wetland delineation for the site
which concluded that 76.3 acres or 79 percent of the site qualified as federally jurisdictional wetlands. Af-
ter the purchase, EPA began an investigation to determine whether the site contained federal wetlands and
was within the jurisdiction of the Clean Water Act. As part of that investigation, the EPA sought informa-
tion from the defendants, including a request for any prior wetland delineations conducted.
   Also according to the indictment, the defendants failed to  disclose the existence of their prior wetland
delineation, and made false statements  regarding activity that was occurring on the site.  The indictment
further states that in a civil lawsuit involving  defendant Acquest Transit, LLC, the United States District
Court for the Western District of New York enjoined that company and its officers, agents and employees
from performing any further earthmoving activity. However, in May 2010, defendant Huntress hired a lo-
cal farmer to  conduct agricultural  and  earthmoving activity on the site.   The  same defendants were
charged in an indictment on November 9, 2011. That indictment was dismissed by the District Court in an
order dated March 25, 2013.
   The indictment is the culmination of an investigation on the  part of EPA special agents. The evidence
was presented  to the grand jury by  Assistant U.S. Attorney Mango and Trial Attorney Gleason, who will
handle the trial of the case.  The fact that a defendant has been charged with a crime is merely an accusa-
tion and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.
BackjxiJoj)
                                                                      EPA Bulletin September/October 2013  18

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Seven Individuals, Three Corporations Charged in Indiana-Based Biofuels Fraud Scheme — On Sep-
tember 18, 2013, the return of two indictments against six individuals and three companies for offenses in-
volving federal renewable fuel  programs was announced. The offenses allegedly created losses to victims
totaling more than $100 million. The 88 counts included in the three charging documents include allegations
of conspiracy, wire fraud, false tax claims, false statements under the Clean Air Act, obstruction of justice,
money laundering and securities fraud.
      The Energy Independence and Security Act of 2007 created a number of federally-funded programs
that provided monetary incentives for the production of biodiesel.  A dollar-per-gallon tax credit was avail-
able only to the first person to  blend the pure biodiesel (known as B100) with petroleum diesel. After the
biodiesel was blended and the tax credit claimed, the resulting product was generally known in the industry
as B99, meaning that it was approximately 99% biodiesel and 1%  petroleum diesel. Additionally, biodiesel
producers could generate and attach credits known as "renewable identification numbers" or RINs to  bio-
diesel they  produced. Because  certain companies need RINs to comply with regulatory obligations, RINs
have significant market value. These two incentives were available only once for any given volume of bio-
diesel. For these reasons, a gallon of B100 with RINs and an available tax credit was worth much more than
a gallon of RIN-stripped B99. At times during the conspiracy, a gallon of B100 was worth up to $2.50 more
than an equivalent gallon of B99.
    Four of the defendants—CRAIG DUCEY, CHAD DUCEY,  CHRIS DUCEY, and BRIAN CARMI-
CHAEL — operated E BIOFUELS,  a Middletown, Indiana, company that held itself out as a producer of
biodiesel from "feedstocks" such as animal fat and vegetable oils. The government alleges that these defen-
dants  conspired with JOSEPH  FURANDO  and EVELYN KATIRINA PATTISON — two executives
with a pair of related New Jersey-based companies that operated under the names  CARAVAN TRADING
COMPANY and CIMA  GREEN  —to purchase RIN-stripped B99 from third parties,  pretend that E-
Biofuels had produced that fuel at its Middletown facility and fraudulently resell  that fuel to customers as
B100  with RINs and an available tax credit. While the E-Biofuels facility was capable of producing B100,
at times during the conspiracy it was producing no fuel of its own, but instead was simply acting as a pass-
through facility for fuel purchased elsewhere.
      The indictment alleges that beginning in July 2009 and  continuing until May 2012, these  defendants
fraudulently sold more than 35 million gallons of RIN-stripped B99 to unwitting customers who paid an in-
flated price, thinking they were purchasing B100 with RINs and an available tax credit. All told, the  cus-
tomers were allegedly defrauded of more than $55 million as a result of these activities and the Internal
Revenue Service was exposed to as much as $35 million in false claims.
    The government alleges that the defendants  delivered the fraudulently mislabeled fuel to the victims in
one of three ways. In some cases, the biodiesel was transported from fuel terminals to the E-Biofuels facility
in Middletown where it was unloaded into a holding  tank. A short time later, the biodiesel would be re-
loaded into tanker trucks and delivered to unsuspecting customers along with fraudulent paperwork  that
misidentified it as B100 with RINs produced by E-Biofuels. On other occasions, the  truck drivers did not
unload the fuel when they arrived at Middletown plant.  Instead, they simply picked up paperwork falsely
stating that the truck contained a load of B100 with RINs that originated at the E-Biofuels facility. The truck
drivers referred to this procedure as "flipping a load."
    Finally, in the most egregious instances, the truck drivers hauled RIN-stripped B99 from fuel terminals
directly to customers. Because these loads never went to the E-Biofuels facility they were known as "ghost
loads" or "phantom loads." In those cases, the defendants faxed or  e-mailed the false paperwork to the truck
drivers along their routes between the fuel terminals and the customer locations.
      In May 2010, E-Biofuels was purchased by Imperial Petroleum, a publicly  traded company based in
Evansville.  After the acquisition, E-Biofuels accounted for more than 97% of Imperial Petroleum's operat-

                                                                      EPA Bulletin September/October 2013   19

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ing income. Defendant Jeffrey Wilson was the president and chief executive officer of Imperial Petroleum.
      The government alleges that Jeffrey Wilson and Craig Ducey knew that E-Biofuels was purchasing
biodiesel from third parties instead of making its own biodiesel. They hid this fact from Imperial's investors,
shareholders and outside auditors by falsely stating that E-Biofuels produced biodiesel from chicken fat and
other feedstocks. They made these and other related false statements and omissions in Imperial Petroleum's
annual and quarterly reports filed with the Securities and Exchange  Commission and in written and oral
communications with Imperial Petroleum's investors and outside auditors.
     If found guilty, the six individuals charged by indictment face up to 20 years  in federal prison on some
counts, as well as significant fines. The three indicted companies also face significant fines and other regula-
tory action.
     An additional defendant was also charged by federal information  and has petitioned the court to enter a
plea of guilty and cooperate with investigators. Brian Carmichael was charged with one count of conspir-
acy to defraud the United States. Carmichael has filed a petition with the court indicating his willingness to
plead guilty to this charge. Carmichael faces up to five years in federal prison if convicted.
     The collaborative investigation that led to the arrests was the result of work by the EPA's Criminal In-
vestigation Division, the Internal  Revenue Service Criminal  Investigation, the FBI, the Securities and Ex-
change Commission, as well as the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Indiana Department of Environ-
mental Management.
    The case is being prosecuted by Senior Litigation Counsel Steven  D.  DeBrota of the U.S. Attorney's
Office, along with Senior Counsel Thomas Ballantine of the Environmental Crimes Section in the Depart-
ment of Justice's Environment and Natural Resources Division, and Jake Schmidt, a Special Assistant U.S.
Attorney of the U.S. Attorney's Office and Senior Attorney for the Securities and Exchange Commission.
     An indictment is only a charge and is not evidence of guilt. All defendants are presumed innocent and
are entitled to a fair trial at which the government must prove guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
  EPA Pub. 310-N-13-009                                                   EPA Bulletin September/October 2013   20

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