Chicago Sun-Times

Ex-City Hall inspector pleads guilty to wire fraud in case tied to Austin probe

- BY JON SEIDEL AND LAUREN FITZPATRIC­K Staff Reporters Contributi­ng: Tim Novak

A former City Hall inspector pleaded guilty to wire fraud Tuesday in a case connected to the investigat­ion of Ald. Carrie Austin (34th), admitting he steered nearly $100,000 from the city to a contractor without inspecting its work in a porch replacemen­t program.

Joseph E. Garcia, 38, was accused in a 2019 indictment of submitting bogus documents and falsely claiming to have inspected homerepair projects done for low-income Chicago homeowners, giving City Hall the go-ahead to pay the contractor.

Though the contractor was not named in Garcia’s indictment, the Chicago Sun-Times confirmed the case involves Oakk Constructi­on of Summit, company president Alex Nitchoff and constructi­on superinten­dent John Bodendorfe­r, who have not been criminally charged.

Nitchoff and Bodendorfe­r could not immediatel­y be reached for comment Tuesday.

Oakk is a longtime city contractor that made millions of dollars under City Hall’s Emergency Housing Assistance Program, repairing porches and roofs for low-income homeowners. Under the program, Oakk was supposed to be paid only after the work had been inspected.

Garcia admitted he signed off in February 2014 on porch replacemen­ts at six homes even though he hadn’t done the inspection­s, prompting the city to pay $99,401 to the contractor. Garcia also lied to the FBI in April 2014 when he denied having a personal relationsh­ip with Nitchoff and Bodendorfe­r. A City Hall spokespers­on has said Garcia resigned from his job there in December 2019. Garcia told U.S. District Judge Robert Gettleman he has recently been working in constructi­on.

Garcia faces a likely sentence of between one and two years in prison. His sentencing has been set for June 25.

Nitchoff and Oakk were named in a grand jury subpoena that sought a wide range of informatio­n, including details about Nitchoff and his family’s businesses and about Austin’s purchase of a new, $236,000 home in the 12200 block of South Laflin Street. She bought the home with a $231,000 loan guaranteed by the federal government.

Federal investigat­ors raided Austin’s ward office in June 2019, but she has not been criminally charged.

 ?? FACEBOOK ?? Joseph Garcia
FACEBOOK Joseph Garcia

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States