Politics & Government

Bloomfield Man Extorted Contractors While Working For OSHA: Feds

A Bloomfield resident and his brother extorted contractors at construction sites in New Jersey over phony safety training, prosecutors said.

BLOOMFIELD, NJ — A Bloomfield resident has pleaded guilty after conspiring with his brother to extort several contractors out of nearly $14,000 while he was employed with the U.S. Department of Labor, Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), federal authorities announced Wednesday.

According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Alvaro Idrovo, 46, of Bloomfield, pleaded guilty one count of conspiring to defraud the United States and to commit an offense against the United States, specifically, an act of extortion under color of his office or employment with OSHA.

Idrovo was charged by complaint in September 2020 with his brother, Paul Idrovo, with one count of conspiring to commit an offense against the United States based on the extortion of a single contractor, prosecutors said.

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Paul Idrovo previously pleaded guilty to an information charging the same offense and was sentenced to three years of probation and ordered to pay $15,600 in restitution, authorities said.

Prosecutors released the following statement about the allegations against Idrovo:

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“Alvaro Idrovo was a compliance safety and health officer for OSHA. He misrepresented to contractors at construction sites in New Jersey that they were facing significant OSHA fines, penalties and possibly jail if they did not get the alleged necessary OSHA safety training. Alvaro Idrovo would provide the contractors with the phone number for the required trainer – allegedly named “Jose Diaz” or “Paul Mejia” – which phone number belonged to Paul Idrovo, posing under these names to conceal the brothers’ relationship. Paul Idrovo was an authorized trainer for certain OSHA Outreach Training Programs, but was not an employee of OSHA.”

Authorities continued:

“The two men charged the contractors $4,000 to $6,000 each, in cash, for the alleged safety training. At the time that Paul Idrovo collected the cash, he provided the contractors with fraudulent computer-generated safety and health certificates for their individual employees, which falsely stated that the employees had received various types of OSHA certified safety training from “Jose Diaz” and “Paul Mejia,” when no training had been provided. Paul Idrovo shared with Alvaro Idrovo approximately $5,000 of the cash collected as part of the extortion conspiracy.”

Prosecutors concluded:

“When OSHA officials learned of the attempt to extort one of the contractors, they referred the matter to federal law enforcement, who arranged for that contractor to make consensual recordings with both Idrovo brothers. During an April 2020 meeting surveilled by law enforcement, the contractor paid Paul Idrovo $6,000 in cash in exchange for ladder and safety awareness training certificates and a safety and health plan, filled in from a template. Alvaro Idrovo attached copies of the training certificates and the plan to his OSHA reports regarding the contractor’s violation despite knowing that the training certificates falsely claimed that training had been provided to the noted individuals on the specified dates in March 2020, that “Jose Diaz” had provided training, and that the alleged training was OSHA certified.”

The conspiracy charge against Alvaro Idrovo carries a maximum potential penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 16, 2023, prosecutors said.

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