Jersey City man gets 6 years in jail for taking $325k in bribes related to railway project

0

A Jersey City man, who is also a New York attorney, has been sentenced to six years in state prison for his involvement in a scheme with a former state Department of Transportation engineer to inflate the costs of a railway repair project, soliciting $325,000 in bribes, Acting Attorney General John Jay Hoffman announced. 

Ernest Dubose

By John Heinis/Hudson County View

Ernest J. Dubose, 34, of Jersey City (formerly of Boston, Mass.), was sentenced to six years in state prison by Superior Court Judge James M. DeMarzo in Morris County earlier today.

He was found guilty on April 20 by a Morris County jury of second-degree charges of conspiracy, official misconduct, bribery in official and political matters, attempted theft by deception, and false contract payment claims. The verdict followed a month-long trial before DeMarzo.

The state presented testimony and evidence that Dubose and his co-defendant, Gaudner Metellus, 36, of Jamison, Pa., a former DOT senior engineer, solicited representatives of a company that operates a shortline freight railroad in New Jersey to engage in a scheme to fraudulently inflate the cost of a project.

They claimed the project was to rehabilitate a railroad bridge in Roseland by more than $700,000. They solicited $325,000 in bribes from the company as their share of the extra state grant funds that were to be spent on the project, authorities said.

Metellus pleaded guilty on Jan. 5 to second-degree official misconduct before Judge Robert J. Gilson. Under the plea agreement, the state will recommend that Metellus be sentenced to three years in state prison, including a two-year period of parole ineligibility.

Additionally, he forfeited his job and his pension and is permanently barred from public employment. Sentencing for Metellus is scheduled for July 10.

“Dubose and Metellus were so consumed by their own greed and dishonesty that they failed to realize that the corporate officials they solicited to participate in their bribery scheme might not suffer from the same lack of integrity,” Hoffman said in a statement.

“This prison sentence demonstrates our resolve to aggressively prosecute corrupt officials and any other individuals who steal public funds.”

Metellus allegedly solicited representatives of the railroad company, the Morristown and Erie Railway, Inc. (M&E), to engage in a scheme to fraudulently inflate the cost of a project to rehabilitate the Eagle Rock Railroad Bridge in Roseland from about $693,000 to $1,421,510.

Metellus said the project was in connection with an application under the State Rail Freight Assistance Grant Program.

Then, Metellus allegedly proposed that the company submit false invoices for rehabilitation work that would never be performed and agreed that he would split the state grant funds with them.

He was responsible for confirming the need for repair work and inspecting completed work in connection with the grant program, authorities said.

Officials of the railroad company alerted the Division of Criminal Justice about the alleged plot and cooperated in the state’s investigation. The two men were originally arrested and charged in the scheme on Sept. 23, 2010.

On Aug. 12, 2010, a company official secretly audiotaped a meeting that the president of the railroad company and another employee held with Metellus at the company’s offices in Morristown, in which Metellus described the fraudulent scheme.

The company contacted the Division of Criminal Justice the following day. The company cooperated in the state’s investigation, recording additional conversations in which Metellus and Dubose discussed the scheme.

On Aug. 23, 2010, Metellus and Dubose met with representatives of the railroad company in Morristown and received two company checks made payable to Dubose in the amounts of $10,000 and $315,000.

The defendants instructed company representatives to make the checks payable to Dubose as a purported “consultant” on the project.

Officials discovered that Dubose had no knowledge or skills that enabled him to act in that capacity. Rather, he acted as the middle man to accept the bribes from M&E, disburse them between himself and Metellus, and insulate Metellus from detection.

The $10,000 check was subsequently deposited into a bank account in Dubose’s name. The $315,000 check was postdated to Nov. 5, 2010, at the direction of Metellus, who indicated that the company would receive state grant funds by that time.


Warning: A non-numeric value encountered in /home/hcvcp/public_html/wp-content/themes/Hudson County View/includes/wp_booster/td_block.php on line 353

LEAVE A REPLY