Sentenced to Up to Three Years in State Prison
Pleaded Guilty to Enterprise Corruption
Brooklyn District Attorney Eric Gonzalez, together with New York City Department of
Investigation Commissioner Mark G. Peters, today announced that a former National Grid
employee, who aided the leader of a shadow utility company that illegally installed gas meters in
violation of safety protocols by infiltrating the public utility and corrupting some of its
employees, has been sentenced to up to three years in prison.
District Attorney Gonzalez said, “This defendant used her position of trust to enable this
criminal enterprise to operate. She circumvented protocols specifically put in place to protect
public safety and facilitated this criminal scheme. She has now been held accountable.”
Commissioner Peters said, “This defendant acted as the dispatcher for a shadow utility
operation, directing a network of unlicensed plumbers and other associates to addresses where
they would install illegal gas meters for thousands of dollars in payments, ignoring safety and
potentially endangering New Yorkers. Today’s sentencing holds her accountable for the integral
part she played in this crime and demonstrates the importance of DOI’s investigations where
City processes and regulations are violated in the construction industry. DOI thanks the
Brooklyn District Attorney’s Office for their assistance and prosecution of this case.”
The District Attorney identified the defendant as Phoebe Bogan, 43, of Rosedale, Queens.
She pleaded guilty to enterprise corruption on May 9, 2018, before Brooklyn Supreme Court
Justice Danny Chun, who, in a plea offered by the Court, promised her an indeterminate term of
one to three years in state prison, to which he today sentenced the defendant.
Bogan worked as a National Grid customer service representative in the Special Services
Group, in the utility’s main office at One Metro Tech Center, during the course of the scheme.
The mastermind of the scheme, Weldon “Al” Findlay, 48, of Snyder Avenue, Brooklyn,
Findlay, who worked for National Grid until 2010, pleaded guilty earlier this year to one count of
enterprise corruption and one count of falsifying business records before Justice Chun, who
sentenced him to a promised term of 2 1/3 to 7 years in state prison.
The District Attorney said that, according to the guilty pleas, the enterprise arranged for
the illegal installation of gas meters in exchange for cash at 33 residential properties across
Brooklyn, including Williamsburg, Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn Heights, Bushwick, Crown
Heights, Midwood, and Borough Park, in addition to homes in parts of Queens. Findlay formed
the enterprise and directed its criminal activities throughout the period covered by the
indictment, namely January 12, 2016 to June 30, 2016.
The Department of Buildings and National Grid have inspected every property identified
in connection with the investigation, and ensured that there is no risk to public safety.
The District Attorney said that existing protocols required National Grid employees
opening accounts (for new or renewed gas service) to check the public Building Information
System (BIS) database to confirm that the property had been inspected as required by the New
York City Department of Buildings (DOB). A licensed master plumber or a DOB inspector must visit the location and conduct appropriate testing to ensure that gas lines have been properly and
safely installed; compliance is indicated by a control number created in the BIS database. A
National Grid employee acting properly would check for the BIS number and then include it in
the account record before dispatching a technician to install a meter and initiate gas service.
According to the investigation, when a landlord with a new or renovated apartment
wanted to avoid either the expense of the required tests, or possible delays associated with
compliance, the landlord paid Findlay, who then contacted Bogan, who would arrange for illegal
service. Landlords could be confident that National Grid employees setting up the account and
providing gas service would violate or ignore any rules or regulations that would prevent or
delay the supply of gas.
The District Attorney thanked New York City Department of Investigation
Commissioner Mark G. Peters and his staff for their hard work on this case. He also thanked the
New York City Department of Buildings and National Grid for their assistance and cooperation
in the investigation.