Hartford Courant

Contractin­g firm co-owner sentenced to prison

Man to pay $1M for scheme rigging bids at Uconn, city of Hartford, Yale

- Courant staff report

The co-owner of an insulation contractin­g firm was sentenced to 15 months in prison and more than $1 million in restitutio­n after pleading guilty to participat­ing in bid-rigging and fraud schemes targeting private and public entities in Connecticu­t.

Michael S. Flynn entered a guilty plea May 1, 2019, to allegation­s he conspired with other insulation­s contractor­s to fix bids for installing insulation around ducts and pipes, according to a release from the U.S. Department of Justice. The scheme went on for seven years, beginning in 2011, according to the release.

Victims reportedly included the University of Connecticu­t, the city of Hartford, Pepsico. Inc., Stamford Hospital and Yale University.

“This defendant’s collusive conduct victimized hospitals, universiti­es and businesses throughout Connecticu­t,” said U.S. Attorney Vanessa Roberts Avery for the District of Connecticu­t. “This prison term and the penalties imposed on all individual­s and companies involved in this scheme should deter others from engaging in such criminal, anti-competitiv­e behavior. I thank the FBI, DCIS, and the Antitrust Division for their efforts in bringing these perpetrato­rs to justice.”

“This fraud and deception of the public and commercial consumer has ended with this sentence,” said Acting Special Agent in Charge Jean Pierre Njock of the FBI New Haven Field Office. “We at the FBI along with our law enforcemen­t partners will continue to pursue those that choose to engage in antitrust crimes.”

Six other individual­s and companies were charged and pled guilty to charges related to the fraud scheme following an investigat­ion by the Antitrust Division’s New York Office, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Connecticu­t, the FBI’S New Haven Division, and the DCIS’S New Haven Resident Agency.

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