Politics & Government

Two Dix Hills Men Sentenced in Con Ed Bribery Scheme

Former Con Ed employee and brother-in-law are incarcerated for accepting kickbacks.

Two Dix Hills men have been sentenced for their roles in multi-million dollar bribery schemes along with 14 employees of Consolidated Edison Corporation of New York, Inc (Con Ed).

William Shannon, 65, who was an inspector for Con Ed, was found guilty of charges related to paying kickbacks from contractors between 2000 and 2009 in connection with construction projects in Manhattan, the Bronx and Westchester County, the United States Attorney's Office announced in a release. His brother-in-law, Nathaniel Ham, 59, was convicted of charges for laundering monies to conceal their true nature and source of.

Ham, a retired Port Authority of New York and New Jersey project contractor, was tried and convicted in March 2011, of conspiring with Shannon and two other Con Ed inspectors to launder payments through Ham’s credit union accounts.

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Ham, who is a former chairman of the Huntington Housing Authority and former member of the Half Hollow Hills Board of Education, was sentenced to 32 months incarceration and is required to pay $1,136,043 in forfeiture to the government. Shannon was sentenced to 36 months incarceration and is required to pay $250,000 in forfeiture to the government and $188,719.29 in restitution to Con Ed.

The sentences mark the culmination of an extensive multi-agency investigation led by the Department of Homeland Security, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Homeland Security Investigations (HSI); the Criminal Investigation Division of the Internal Revenue Service; and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, Office of Inspector General.

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In the years following the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, Con Ed directed or took part in much of the subsurface construction in lower Manhattan, and received hundreds of millions of dollars in federal funds, mainly from the United States Department of Housing and Urban Development, to perform the work. In connection with these projects, Con Ed inspectors solicited bribes in exchange for approving contractor invoices that listed phantom pay items, allowing contractors to perform unnecessary additional work on the projects, and expediting Con Ed payments to the contractors. These schemes cost Con Ed millions of dollars, the release said.

The investigation became public with the first series of arrests of the Con Ed inspectors on January 14, 2009. Since that time, officials at Con Ed, especially those employed in its internal auditing unit, have provided assistance to the government’s investigation.

“After 9/11, these defendants were tasked with the responsibility of helping rebuild our city’s infrastructure. They focused instead on lining their own pockets at the expense of utility customers and residents of the metropolitan area,” stated United States Attorney Loretta Lynch. “They have now been held to account.”

“The individuals sentenced in this investigation masterminded an unscrupulous financial scheme that essentially defrauded critical projects aimed at improving New York City’s infrastructure,” said James T. Hayes, Jr., Special Agent-in-Charge of ICE’s Homeland Security Investigations in New York. “HSI will pursue those who attempt to conceal their illicit gains and compromise the people’s trust in public works projects.”

*This article originally stated that Nathaniel Ham was a former Con Ed employee. Only his brother-in-law, William Shannon worked for the power company. It also stated that Ham was convicted of soliciting bribes. He was found guilty for money laudering only.

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