FORMER U.S. ARMY OFFICER
SENTENCED TO
42 MONTHS IN PRISON FOR
BRIBERY AND WEAPONS
CONSPIRACY
WASHINGTON, D.C.
(Jan. 23, 2009) –
Michael Wheeler, a
former lieutenant
colonel in the U.S. Army
Reserves, was sentenced
late yesterday to 42
months in prison for his
participation in a
wide-ranging bribery
conspiracy involving the
U.S. government, the
Republic of Iraq and the
Coalition Provisional
Authority - South
Central Region (CPA-SC)
in Al-Hillah, Iraq,
announced Assistant
Attorney General Lanny
A. Breuer of the
Criminal Division.
Wheeler was also
sentenced by U.S.
District Court Judge
Mary L. Cooper for the
District of New Jersey -
Trenton Division to
serve three years of
supervised release
following his prison
term and to pay $1,200
in restitution.
Wheeler, 50, of
Amherst Junction, Wis.,
was charged in a
25-count indictment
unsealed on Feb. 7,
2007, along with former
U.S. Army Colonel Curtis
G. Whiteford, former Lt.
Col. Debra M. Harrison,
and civilians William
Driver and Seymour
Morris Jr., with various
crimes related to a
scheme to defraud the
CPA-SC. Wheeler was an
adviser and project
officer for CPA
reconstruction projects.
According to
testimony at trial,
Wheeler, along with
Whiteford and Harrison,
conspired from December
2003 to December 2005
with at least three
others—Robert Stein, at
the time the comptroller
and funding officer for
the CPA-SC; Philip H.
Bloom, a U.S. citizen
who owned and operated
several companies in
Iraq and Romania; and
former U.S. Army Lt.
Col. Bruce D.
Hopfengardner—to rig the
bids on contracts being
awarded by the CPA-SC so
that more than 20
contracts were awarded
to Bloom. In total,
Bloom received
approximately $8 million
in rigged contracts.
Testimony revealed that
Bloom, in return,
provided Whiteford,
Harrison, Wheeler,
Stein, Hopfengardner and
others with more than $1
million in cash, SUVs,
sports cars, a
motorcycle, jewelry,
computers, business
class airline tickets,
liquor, promise of
future employment with
Bloom and other items of
value.
Bloom admitted he
laundered more than $2
million in currency that
Whiteford, Harrison,
Wheeler, Hopfengardner,
Stein and others stole
from the CPA-SC that had
been designated for the
reconstruction of Iraq.
Bloom then used his
foreign bank accounts in
Iraq, Romania and
Switzerland to send some
of the stolen money to
Harrison, Stein,
Hopfengardner and other
Army officials in return
for them awarding
contracts to Bloom and
his companies.
“These defendants
betrayed the trust and
confidence placed in
them by both the U.S.
government and the
people of Iraq,” said
Assistant Attorney
General Lanny A.
Breuer. “By using their
positions to line their
own pockets, they made
it more difficult for
others to carry out the
legitimate goals of
rebuilding and
reconstruction. We will
continue to vigorously
investigate and
prosecute this kind of
corruption, wherever it
occurs and no matter who
commits it.”
At trial, Wheeler was
convicted of conspiracy
to commit bribery,
honest services wire
fraud, the interstate
transport of stolen
property (ITSP) and the
possession of
unregistered firearms.
Whiteford was convicted
at trial of conspiracy
to commit bribery and
ITSP, and Driver pleaded
guilty to money
laundering on Aug. 5,
2009. Morris was
acquitted.
“This sentence
illustrates that even
military officers are
not above the law and
will be brought to
justice for their
participation in
defrauding efforts to
support Iraqi
reconstruction, no
matter how complex the
fraud scheme,” said
Acting Assistant
Director in Charge John
G. Perren of the FBI’s
Washington Field Office.
“The sentencing of
Michael Wheeler marks
the culmination of
SIGIR’s lengthy
investigation into a
wide-ranging bribery,
contract fraud, and
kickback scheme that
occurred in Hilla, Iraq,
during 2003-2004” said
Stuart W. Bowen Jr., the
Special Inspector
General for Iraq
Reconstruction (SIGIR).
“In concert with our
partner law enforcement
agencies, SIGIR will
continue to pursue
vigorously its many
other ongoing cases to
hold accountable those
who took advantage of
the Iraq reconstruction
program to criminally
enrich themselves.”
“Wheeler and the others
abused their positions
of trust to line their
own pockets,” said
Homeland Security
Assistant Secretary for
Immigration and Customs
Enforcement (ICE)
John Morton. “We hope
these sentences deter
others from attempting
to scheme the government
for their own advantage.”
“As a project officer
of government contracts,
Mr. Wheeler was
entrusted to oversee
contractors and ensure
taxpayer money was spent
wisely,” said Victor S.O.
Song, Chief, Internal
Revenue Service Criminal
Investigation.
“He broke that trust to
enrich himself at the
expense of the American
taxpayers. IRS Criminal
Investigation is
committed to exposing
public corruption at any
level by following the
money from the crime to
the criminal.”
On Jan. 29, 2007,
co-conspirator Stein was
sentenced to nine years
in prison for related
charges of conspiracy,
bribery and money
laundering, as well as
weapons possession
charges, for his role in
the same scheme. Stein
was also ordered to
forfeit $3.6 million for
his role in the bribery
and money laundering
scheme.
On Feb. 16, 2007,
co-conspirator Bloom was
sentenced to 46 months
in prison for related
charges of conspiracy,
bribery and money
laundering for his role
in the scheme. Bloom
was also ordered to
forfeit $3.6 million for
his role in the bribery
and money laundering
scheme.
On June 25, 2007,
Hopfengardner was
sentenced to 21 months
in prison for conspiracy
and money laundering
related to this scheme.
Hopfengardner was also
ordered to forfeit
$144,500.
On Dec. 8, 2009,
Whiteford was sentenced
to 60 months in prison
for conspiring to commit
bribery and ITSP. He
was also ordered to
forfeit the things of
value he received from
Stein and others,
including a Breitling
watch, a Toshiba laptop
computer and $10,000 in
cash.
On June 4, 2009,
Harrison was sentenced
to 30 months in prison
and ordered to pay $366,
640 in restitution.
Harrison pleaded guilty
on July 28, 2008,
admitting that she took
more than $300,000 from
the CPA-SC while she was
deployed there and that
she used some of the
stolen money to make
improvements at her
home. Harrison also
admitted that she
received a Cadillac
Escalade from Bloom and
that she helped to move
unregistered firearms
from a hotel in North
Carolina to Stein’s
home.
On Dec. 10, 2009,
Driver was sentenced to
six months home
confinement and ordered
to pay $36,000 in
restitution for his role
in laundering portions
of stolen CPA money
brought from Iraq back
into the United States
by Harrison, his wife.
These cases are being
prosecuted by Trial
Attorneys John P.
Pearson and Kevin
Driscoll of the Criminal
Division’s Public
Integrity Section, as
well as Trial Attorney
Ann C. Brickley. The
cases are being
investigated by the IRS
Criminal Investigation;
the Special Inspector
General for Iraq
Reconstruction; ICE; and
the FBI-Washington Field
Office.