The Denver Post

Trammell Crow settles bid-rigging accusation­s

- By Jon Murray

The developmen­t manager accused of showing favoritism toward a constructi­on bidder on the Colorado Convention Center expansion project has signed a $250,000 settlement with state investigat­ors.

Trammell Crow’s agreement with the office of Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser, set to be announced Wednesday, follows a $1.3 million settlement reached earlier this month with the bidder in question, Mortenson Constructi­on. All that remains of the investigat­ion initiated by Denver city officials in December 2018 is a probe into the conduct of a former Trammell Crow executive.

Though state investigat­ors and city officials placed heavy fault on Dallas-based Trammell Crow’s local operation, the company is getting off with

lighter fine because of its “early cooperatio­n” with city officials and the investigat­ion, according to the settlement document.

Weiser said the case has underlined equity issues in public bidding that sometimes keep lessestabl­ished contractor­s — especially those owned by women or minorities — from being treated fairly.

“It’s important, for me, to make sure that public procuremen­t processes are competitiv­e and fair, so that citizens get the best deal possible,” he said.

This month’s settlement­s have come as Denver is wrapping up a restarted bid process that was set back more than a year by the bidrigging scandal. City officials’ accusation that Trammell Crow improperly shared informatio­n and colluded with Mortenson added another hurdle to the convention center’s planned $233 million rooftop expansion, first approved by city voters in 2015.

City officials have said they plan to release an updated budget and timeline in coming months, but it’s unlikely the expansion will be completed for at least two or three more years. The project is aimed at updating the large building and adding a new level of meeting space to attract more events and convention­s.

Mortenson agreed to pay a $650,000 fine and to donate conthe struction services worth at least that amount to a project geared toward helping with the COVID19 pandemic. That project hasn’t yet been identified.

In both cases, the fines will go not to the city but to the attorney general’s office to cover its investigat­ion costs and pay for future enforcemen­t and education activities.

Trammell Crow, hired as the city’s program manager, was charged with shepherdin­g the convention center project along, including helping to run a bid process that attracted three constructi­on contenders. Trammell Crow was paid about $1 million before Mayor Michael Hancock pulled the plug and announced the halt of bidding.

Trammell Crow quickly fired senior vice president Michael Sullivan, who had exchanged several emails with Mortenson executives that city officials questioned. The company pledged to cooperate, saying at the time that its leaders were “mortified that this has occurred.”

“It started with the question on the table: Was this a criminal matter?” Weiser said, as first the Denver district attorney’s office and then his office investigat­ed. “We did conclude that there was no basis for criminal liability, and that left us with the question of what was the appropriat­e civil liability.”

Sullivan’s individual conduct still is under investigat­ion, Weiser confirmed. The Denver Post’s past attempts to reach him have been unsuccessf­ul.

In a statement, Trammell Crow said its own internal investigat­ion, conducted by a law firm, “determined that this situation arose from the actions of one individual who violated Trammell Crow Company’s business values and principles.”

“We take very seriously our business values and our 60-year history as a civic and corporate leader in Denver and Colorado,” the statement says.

The attorney general’s office cited evidence, reported earlier by The Post, that Sullivan gave Mortenson preferenti­al treatment by sharing confidenti­al informatio­n.

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