Holley man sentenced to 18 months for defrauding NYSDOT on contracts

Posted 3 May 2019 at 8:18 am

Press Release, U.S. Attorney Grant Jaquith, Northern District of New York

SYRACUSE – Nathaniel P. Lorenz, 47, of Holley was sentenced on Thursday to 18 months, and to pay restitution in the amount of $600,000, following his trial conviction last year on wire and mail fraud charges.

The announcement was made by United States Attorney Grant C. Jaquith; Douglas Shoemaker, Special Agent in Charge of the Northeast Regional Office of the United States Department of Transportation, Office of Inspector General (USDOT-OIG); New York State Inspector General Letizia Tagliafierro; and Robert L. Keihm, Chief Investigator for the New York State Department of Transportation (NYSDOT) Investigations Bureau.

Senior United States District Judge Norman A. Mordue also ordered Lorenz to serve a 2-year term of post-imprisonment supervised release.

Lorenz was convicted on all charges – eight counts of wire fraud and one count of mail fraud – following a 7-day trial that ended on November 6, 2018. The evidence at trial established that Lorenz, a former police officer and sheriff’s deputy, submitted fake invoices to the New York State Department of Transportation in order to conceal that he was not buying the materials needed to perform bridge maintenance contracts in the Buffalo and Binghamton regions, for which his company was ultimately paid more than $1 million.

Lorenz’s company, ACME Powerwashing Inc. (ACME) of Holley, contracted with NYSDOT in 2015 and 2016 to clean and seal the road portions of bridges, known as concrete bridge decks. The work involved cleaning the bridge decks and then sealing them with a chemical that makes the concrete more resistant to penetration by water, chlorides and waterborne contaminants, which might cause potholes. The Federal Highway Administration, part of the United States Department of Transportation, provided most of the money for these contracts.

Each of these contracts required ACME to purchase a certain amount of sealing chemical, based on how many square feet of concrete bridge deck was sealed. On three contracts in 2015 and 2016, Lorenz submitted fraudulent invoices to NYSDOT in order to conceal that he was not buying the amount of the sealing chemical required by the contracts. Lorenz falsely claimed that he was buying sealing chemicals from S.E. Brett, Inc., another company that he owned that does not sell anything.

This case was investigated by USDOT-OIG, the Office of the New York State Inspector General, and NYSDOT’s Investigations Bureau, and was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Barnett.


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