Three Expected to Plead Guilty in Scheme Involving City’s Payroll Project
By BENJAMIN WEISER
Published: June 18, 2013
Three defendants accused of helping to conceal kickbacks generated in a massive fraud scheme that involved CityTime,
a troubled automated payroll project in New York City, are expected to
plead guilty in Manhattan on Wednesday, federal prosecutors said in a
new court filing.
The three are related to the lead defendant in the case, Mark Mazer, who
has been accused of helping to orchestrate the scheme, which
prosecutors said involved more than $600 million in city money and more
than $40 million in kickbacks.
Mr. Mazer has pleaded not guilty and is scheduled for trial along with
two co-defendants in September. In 2012, a government contractor,
Science Applications International Corporation, agreed to forfeit more than $500 million as part of a settlement for its role in the case. Two other defendants have pleaded guilty.
The three defendants who are expected to enter guilty pleas are Mr.
Mazer’s wife, Svetlana Mazer; his mother, Larisa Medzon; and a cousin,
Anna Makovetskaya. All three were charged with money laundering
conspiracy, and were accused of using shell companies to help Mr. Mazer
hide kickbacks he was allegedly receiving in the scheme.
The office of Preet Bharara, the United States attorney in Manhattan,
declined to comment. It said in a letter on Tuesday to the judge, George
B. Daniels of Federal District Court, that the three would plead to
unspecified charges as part of agreements with prosecutors. Lawyers for
the three defendants declined to comment or did not return calls seeking
comment.
Rose Gill Hearn, the commissioner of the Department of Investigation,
citing the previous guilty pleas and the city’s recovery of $500
million, said, “This case continues to move forward and yield positive
results for the taxpayers.”
Mr. Mazer’s lawyer, Gerald L. Shargel, said of the three defendants
expected to plead guilty: “It has long been recognized that people may
plead guilty to avert the draconian consequences of conviction. I am
certain that these issues were in their thoughts.”
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