The Oklahoman

Ex-CEO who oversaw doomed nuclear project is sentenced

Former exec Marsh to spend two years in prison for fraud

- Jeffrey Collins

COLUMBIA, S.C. – A utility executive who repeatedly lied to keep investors pumping money into South Carolina’s $9 billion nuclear reactor debacle will spend two years in prison for fraud, a federal judge decided on Thursday.

Former SCANA Corp. CEO Kevin Marsh agreed with prosecutor­s that he should serve the sentence and the judge approved the deal, making him the first executive put behind bars for misleading the public on the project, which failed without ever generating a watt of power.

Marsh said he wants to serve his time now because his wife of 46 years has incurable breast cancer, and he hopes to care for her after leaving prison.

U.S. District Judge Mary Geiger Lewis cited Marsh’s remorse and expansive cooperatio­n with federal authoritie­s as she reluctantl­y accepted the plea deal, which is well below the federal sentencing guidelines of five years. She said the prosecutio­n and defense descriptio­n of what Marsh did is a “vanilla way to describe it,” adding that it understate­s “the seriousnes­s of this non-disclosure.”

“Your crime was committed with a little more elegance and sophistica­tion than many I see,” Geiger told Marsh. “But you don’t get credit for that.”

A second former SCANA executive and an official at Westinghou­se Electric Co., the lead contractor to build two new reactors at the V.C. Summer plant, have also pleaded guilty. A second Westinghou­se executive has been indicted and is awaiting trial.

Marsh pleaded guilty in February to conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud in federal court, and obtaining property by false pretenses in state court. Prosecutor­s agreed to his request to serve his entire sentence on both sets of charges in a federal prison.

His actions took more than $1 billion from the pockets of ratepayers and investors, authoritie­s said in an 87-page Securities and Exchange Commission lawsuit filed against him and a second executive in 2020.

SCANA and its subsidiary, South Carolina Electric & Gas, were destroyed by the debt and poor management and were bought out by Dominion Energy of Virginia in 2019.

State-owned utility Santee Cooper, which had a 45% stake in the project, ended up saddled with $4 billion in debt even though SCANA controlled management of the project.

Marsh has already paid $5 million in restitutio­n. SCANA had paid Marsh $5 million in 2017, the year the utility abandoned the hopelessly behind-schedule project.

Reading a statement Thursday, Marsh said he takes responsibi­lity for the project’s failure even though he was misled by Westinghou­se, which was building the reactors. “Not a day goes by that I don’t regret these nuclear plants weren’t built for the citizens of South Carolina,” he said.

For sentencing, Marsh’s attorneys also submitted 10 letters from friends, colleagues and church pastors detailing his good acts such as helping the family of an employee killed on the job get financial and legal help, securing an air conditione­r for a women’s home and taking a week out of his busy executive schedule to volunteer for vacation Bible school.

The letters also detailed his relationsh­ip with his wife, Sue, who he married when both were teens. She has terminal and incurable metastatic breast cancer and may not be able to visit her husband in prison because of COVID-19 fears and her weakened condition, defense lawyers said.

Federal regulatory filings have documented the history of the doomed nuclear project begun in 2008. Those filings said Marsh never wavered from saying the two reactors being built at the V.C. Summer site north of Columbia would be finished by the end of 2020 – a deadline that had to be met to receive the $1.4 billion in federal tax credits needed to keep the $10 billion project from overwhelmi­ng the utility.

 ?? JEFFREY COLLINS/AP ?? Former SCANA CEO Kevin Marsh, center, walks out of a courtroom Thursday with his lawyers after being sentenced to two years in prison for lying and deceiving the public about the progress of a pair of nuclear reactors in South Carolina that were never finished and wasted billions of dollars.
JEFFREY COLLINS/AP Former SCANA CEO Kevin Marsh, center, walks out of a courtroom Thursday with his lawyers after being sentenced to two years in prison for lying and deceiving the public about the progress of a pair of nuclear reactors in South Carolina that were never finished and wasted billions of dollars.

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