Tuesday, April 27, 2021

Comptroller Stringer Investigation: City Lost $1.86 Million in Failed Effort to Purchase Ventilators During the COVID-19 Pandemic

 

Investigation shows how the City, having suspended contracting rules early in the pandemic, ignored early warning signs and pre-paid $8.26 million for 130 ventilators that it never received

Global Medical Supply Group LLC exploited the City’s public health emergency with a high-pressure sales pitch and false assurances, never delivered any ventilators, and failed to return $1.86 million of City tax money

Mayor’s suspension of City procurement rules exposed taxpayers to risk of fraud, waste, and abuse

Comptroller recommends emergency procurement procedures to enable the City to quickly purchase what it needs, while reducing risks of waste and fraud

Today, New York City Comptroller Scott M. Stringer released the findings of an investigation into the City’s full prepayment of $8.26 million to Global Medical Supply Group LLC (Global) in an unsuccessful attempt to purchase 130 ventilators during the initial COVID-19 surge in March 2020. Comptroller Stringer’s investigation found that Global, a business formed less than two weeks before the City’s prepayment, never delivered any ventilators and, even after protracted negotiations and litigation, failed to return $1.86 million of City taxpayers’ money—nearly a quarter of the City’s payment.

“Our investigation found that the City lost nearly $2 million on lifesaving equipment that it never received,” said Comptroller Stringer. “I am again calling on the City to immediately restore City procurement rules to protect taxpayers from abuse by unreliable vendors and from costly mistakes. While the pandemic took us by surprise, there is no excuse not to learn from our misfires going forward. If we fail to heed these findings and take sensible measures to safeguard taxpayer dollars for the next emergency, then the City will once again let New Yorkers down.”

Comptroller Stringer’s investigation found that City procurement officials at the Department of Citywide Administrative Services (DCAS), Mayor’s Office of Contract Services (MOCS), and other agencies were able to arrange the prepayment of $8.26 million to Global 36 hours after receiving its unsolicited proposal—with no price competition, no goods delivered, no security, no meaningful assessment of Global’s business history and reliability, and no signed contract—because the Mayor had issued an emergency executive order suspending City procurement laws and rules for COVID-19-related purchases. Global sent much of the City’s money to a bank account in China maintained by Global’s supposed ventilator supplier—a trading company that exported shoes—compromising the City’s ability to trace and recoup the remainder of what it is owed through the U.S. legal system.

In this case, with key procurement safeguards removed, City employees—pressed to acquire scarce items quickly for emergency use—were extraordinarily vulnerable to exploitation by unscrupulous actors and to mistakes and omissions that the rules might have prevented.

The investigation identified three factors that led to the City’s monetary loss: Mayor de Blasio’s March 2020 executive order suspending City procurement rules without substituting other controls; Global’s exploitation of the City’s emergency need for ventilators with a high-pressure sales pitch and false assurances of immediate delivery; and obvious warning signs of Global’s untrustworthiness that City officials missed or disregarded.

Comptroller Stringer’s investigation of the City’s payment of $8,261,500 to Global revealed the following:

  • The suspension of City procurement rules for COVID-19-related purchases, including rules requiring vendors to disclose their business histories and those requiring signed contracts for multimillion dollar purchases, exposed the City to risks of waste, fraud, and abuse.
  • Global exploited the City’s public health emergency with a high-pressure sales pitch and false promises of immediate delivery of 130 ventilators when the City was an epicenter of the first wave of the coronavirus pandemic and was publicly calling for 15,000 ventilators to help care for hospitalized patients at risk of death.
  • Global engaged in an intensive marketing campaign—including at least 28 phone calls, 149 texts, and 60 emails in a four-day period centered around a weekend—to convince City decision makers to pay the full $8.26 million price in advance for 130 ventilators that Global promised would be shipped immediately.
  • City officials ignored an early warning sign that Global’s assertions were unreliable, specifically, Global’s initial claim that it could “lock [the City] in” for “up to 20 million” brand-name, N95 respirator masks. A City official immediately alerted colleagues that the masks’ manufacturer had warned the City—just one day earlier—to be “wary” of “vendors claiming to have those types of numbers.”
  • The City advanced $8.26 million to Global, even after finding the company’s existence “tough to confirm,” as one City official noted at the time. With procurement rules suspended, Global was not required to disclose basic background information, including its business history, and City officials knew little about the new company.
  • The City also knew little about the company Global named as its “direct source” for the ventilators it offered to sell to the City. City officials reviewing Global’s proposal learned that its supposed source for the ventilators was a trading company that had previously exported footwear from China to a U.S.-based company. They found no evidence that it had ever dealt in medical equipment.
  • City officials lacked a clear understanding of Global’s relationship with the factory where it claimed to have secured ventilators. When City officials requested evidence of Global’s access to the ventilators it was offering the City, Global provided a few photographs and video recordings of unknown origin and publicly available information about the product. A City official later acknowledged that in retrospect the ventilators shown in a video Global sent to the City “could have been anyone’s vents.”
  • City officials missed two red flags in Global’s ventilator pitch—Global’s repeated, implausible claims that it could ship 20,000 brand name ventilators to the City from China at a rate of 1,000 per day, and Global’s far-fetched assertion that it had secured capacity for 80,000 of those ventilators at a single factory. Both claims were belied by public reporting at the time. The brand manufacturer later informed the Comptroller’s Office that its total production capacity in April 2020 (the month following Global’s ventilator proposal to the City) was less than 1,000 units per month.
  • The City lost $1,859,068.94 in the Global transaction, even after concerted efforts to recover the funds, including a recently settled legal action the City filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern Direct of Florida. In June 2020, the City recovered $3,977,594.28 and, under the recent settlement, has received or will receive an additional $2,424,836.78 from Global and others involved in the transaction. Upon collecting the settlement amount, the City will have recovered $6,402,431.06 of its $8,261,500 payment to Global for the ventilators it never received and will have lost $1,859,068.94. The City has also obtained a judgment in that loss amount against Global. However, according to the settlement agreement, Global has informed the City that its liabilities exceed the value of its assets.

Comptroller Stringer recommended seven measures to enable the City to purchase what it needs to address emergencies, such as the COVID-19 pandemic, while mitigating the associated risks of fraud, waste, and abuse. The recommendations urge the City to:

  • Follow the City’s existing procurement rules, which already allow expedited emergency purchases, and amend them, if necessary, for additional speed and flexibility.
  • Institute dollar limits and additional safeguards to mitigate the inherent risks of prepayments that might be necessary in emergencies.
  • Develop a toolkit of resources for emergency procurements to help balance the need for speed with safeguards to prevent waste, loss, and abuse of City funds.
  • Develop an adaptable short form contract with standard provisions to protect critical City interests when emergency procurements are necessary.
  • Develop a short-form vendor-disclosure template to help expedite vendor responsibility determinations in emergency procurements.
  • Create a centralized clearinghouse for expedited vendor responsibility determinations that all City agencies can use for emergency procurements.
  • Develop guidelines for quick vendor responsibility determinations in emergency procurements.

Comptroller Stringer has repeatedly urged Mayor de Blasio to rescind Emergency Executive Order (EEO) 101, Section 2, which has suspended laws and regulations related to procurement in the City since March 17, 2020. Following two letters sent to the Administration in August and October of 2020 that yielded no response or action, Comptroller Stringer for the third time in March 2021 underscored the need to rescind the Mayor’s emergency suspension of procurement laws. The City Charter and the City’s Procurement Policy Board (PPB) Rules already provide for expedited emergency purchases but with safeguards and transparency mechanisms in place to protect the City’s interests. Under Mayor de Blasio’s emergency powers, the City has entered into 1,356 contracts totaling more than $6.1 billion in City funds since March 2020 without the crucial statutory oversight of the Comptroller’s Office.

To read Comptroller Stringer’s investigation of the City’s failed purchase of ventilators from Global Medical Supply Group LLC, click here.

250 DAys and Counting

 


Forget about what you are seeing on television or hearing on the radio, the NYPD is working hard to keep New York City the Safest Big City. We have just presented the largest budget in New York City history thanks to the stimulus money New York City will be getting from Washington, thank you President Harris

All is well here in New York City.


Affordable Housing Lottery Launches For 972 Washington Avenue In Morrisania, The Bronx

 

972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx. All images courtesy of NYC Housing Connect

The affordable housing lottery has launched for 972 Washington Avenue, a 12-story building in Morrisania, The Bronx. The 83,811-square-foot development was designed by EQ Architecture And Design, and yields 107 supportive housing units. Available on NYC Housing Connect are 41 units for residents at 60 percent of the area median income (AMI), ranging in eligible income from $31,406 to $57,300.

Residences will have energy-efficient appliances, air conditioning, and smart controls for heating and cooling. Additional amenities include a shared laundry room, bike storage lockers, a children’s playroom and playground, outdoor areas, media room, an on-site resident manager, and community events and classes.

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

Interiors at 972 Washington Avenue in Morrisania, The Bronx

At 60 percent of the AMI, there are 41 studios with a $843 monthly rent for incomes ranging from $31,406 to $57,300.

Prospective renters must meet income and household size requirements to apply for these apartments. Applications must be postmarked or submitted online no later than June 25, 2021.

Monday, April 26, 2021

Bron Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. Endorses Eric Adams For Mayor

 


On the very famous Fordham Road overpass of the Grand Concourse Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. along with dozens of Bronxites voiced their support for Brooklyn Borough President Eric Adams for Mayor of New York City.

BP Diaz Jr.  told the story of when he was a young assemblyman from the South Bronx twenty-two years ago of a fatal shooting of a man in a hallway by police many times. He said it was Captain Adams who led 100 Black men to investigate the police shootings

 


Bronx BP Diaz Jr. Hugs his good friend Eric Adam after introducing him.


Mayoral candidate Eric Adams explains there are some candidates who are pretenders, and then there are candidates such as himself who get things done. 


I told candidate Adams that when I questioned candidate Andrew Yang on topics such as NYCHA and Homelessnes Yang's answer was that will be taken care of when he (Yang) becomes mayor. Candidate Adams called Andrew Yang one of the pretender candidates.



Governor Cuomo Announces Additional Reopening Guidance and Updates New Yorkers on State's Progress during COVID-19 Pandemic

 

Large-Scale Outdoor Event Venues Can Increase Spectator Capacity from 20% to 33% Beginning May 19

Casinos and Gaming Facilities Can Increase Capacity from 25% to 50% Beginning May 15

Offices Can Increase Capacity from 50% to 75% Beginning May 15

Gyms/Fitness Centers Outside of New York City Can Increase Capacity from 33% to 50% Beginning May 15

Social Distancing, Masks, Health Screenings and All Other State Health/Safety Protocols Remain in Effect

Statewide Positivity Rate is 2.39%; 7-Day Average Positivity is 2.13%, Lowest Since November 8

3,174 Patient Hospitalizations Statewide; Lowest Since November 26; Down 609 Over the Last Week

729 Patients in the ICU; Lowest Since November 30

454 Intubated; Lowest Since December 4

41 COVID-19 Deaths in New York State Yesterday


 Governor Andrew M. Cuomo today announced that spectator capacity at large-scale outdoor event venues, including professional and collegiate sports and live performing arts and entertainment, will increase from 20 to 33 percent beginning May 19. This increase will coincide with the previously announced increase in large-scale indoor event venue capacity. Social distancing, masks, health screenings and all other State health and safety protocols remain in effect.

The Governor also announced that capacities would be increased throughout several industries that have proven to safely reopen in accordance with the State's COVID-19 health and safety guidelines, starting May 15:

  • Gyms and fitness centers outside of New York City will increase from 33% to 50% capacity.
  • Casinos and gaming facilities will increase from 25% to 50% capacity.
  • Offices will increase from 50% to 75% capacity. 

"We are making tremendous progress in the fight against COVID-19 — our vaccination rates are going up and the positivity and hospitalization rates are going down, so now we are going to open the valves of our economy even further," Governor Cuomo said. "We are increasing the capacity limits throughout several industries, including gyms outside of New York City, casinos, offices and large-scale outdoor event venues. This is all great news, but we are not out of the woods yet. Washing hands, wearing masks and staying socially distanced are critical tools each of us can use to slow the spread as we continue our efforts to defeat COVID once and for all."

Today's data is summarized briefly below:

  • Test Results Reported - 126,953
  • Total Positive - 3,039
  • Percent Positive - 2.39%
  • 7-Day Average Percent Positive - 2.13%
  • Patient Hospitalization - 3,174 (-24)
  • Net Change Patient Hospitalization Past Week - -609
  • Patients Newly Admitted - 306
  • Hospital Counties - 54
  • Number ICU - 729 (-13)
  • Number ICU with Intubation - 454 (-6)
  • Total Discharges - 174,087 (+312)
  • Deaths - 41
  • Total Deaths - 41,849

THE RECOVERY BUDGET: MAYOR DE BLASIO RELEASES THE EXECUTIVE BUDGET FOR FISCAL YEAR 2022

 

The Recovery Budget is a radical investment in working families to drive economic growth in every neighborhood

 “A recovery for all of us starts by investing in working families across New York City. The pandemic hit us hard but together we will fight back and drive a recovery in every neighborhood. We are meeting the moment with direct investments in education, small businesses, open space and public health, and we are building up reserves to continue our strong fiscal foundation for the future. With the Recovery Budget, New York City will emerge from this challenge stronger, fairer, cleaner, greener and safer than ever.” – Mayor Bill de Blasio  

Today, Mayor Bill de Blasio presented the Recovery Budget, New York City’s $98.6 billion Executive Budget for Fiscal Year 2022 (FY22). The Recovery Budget is an historic stimulus-driven investment in our comeback that will drive economic growth, lift up working families and small businesses, promote academic and social resilience and ensure a clean and safe city for all.
 
HIGHLIGHTS OF THE RECOVERY BUDGET
 
The Recovery Budget is a radical investment in working families to drive economic growth in every neighborhood. This budget:
 
  • Adds unprecedented equity investments in students and schools
  • Redefines summer school with Summer Rising
  • Expands early childhood special education 
  • Funds New Deal-style job creation with City Cleanup Corps
  • Invests to stop gun violence through partnerships with communities
  • Redefines citywide responses to mental health crises
  • Fully funds universal free 3-K for All and expands capacity for early childhood special education 
  • Reimagines public space with Open Streets, Open Restaurants, new bike lanes and the Manhattan Greenway
 
GAME CHANGERS: STIMULUS AND VACCINATIONS
 
Federal stimulus and the City’s robust vaccination campaign are propelling New York City to recovery. New York City experienced a growth of 100,000 jobs from December 2020 to March 2021, and expects to gain 400,000 more to reach a total of 4.5 million jobs by the end of 2021.
 
The City’s tax revenue forecast exceeded expectations, with an increase of $1.37 billion in Fiscal Year 21 and $164 million in FY22, for a total of $1.5 billion. 
 
In addition to the federal Coronavirus Response and Relief Supplemental Appropriations Act enacted on December 27th, 2020, on March 10, 2021, President Joseph R. Biden signed The American Rescue Plan, providing robust federal funding to New York City and other localities that have been on the front lines of COVID-19. The Plan recognizes $5.9 billion in direct local aid and $7.0 billion in federal education funding from the two federal stimulus bills. This is on top of an additional $1.3 billion in FEMA assistance to cover COVID-19 related costs like vaccinations, testing, emergency food programs, medical staffing and more.
 
The injection of federal stimulus will provide the momentum needed to recover from the financial impact of the pandemic, and will supercharge the city’s economic growth over time.
 
In addition, New York State’s Fiscal Year 2022 Budget restored nearly all cuts and cost shifts imposed on the City in January. This included long overdue Campaign for Fiscal Equity funding, which ramps up to $1.1 billion annually in Fiscal Year 2024 and will bring educational resources and equity to our school children for years to come.
 
BUDGETING FOR OUR FUTURE 
 
The Recovery Budget adds $1.8 billion to the City’s budget reserves, including $1.6 billion to the Retiree Health Benefits Trust in FY21 and $200 million to the General Reserve. This brings total reserves in Fiscal Year 2022 to $4.59 billion, including $3.8 billion in the Retiree Health Benefits Trust, $493 million in the Rainy Day Fund, and $300 million in the General Reserve.
 
This Administration has remained focused on savings, even when revenues were strong. The Fiscal Year 2022 Executive Budget reflects almost $3.9 billion in savings over Fiscal Years 2021 and 2022, with $603 million achieved across the two years in this Plan alone.
 
INVESTING IN NEW YORKERS
 
The Recovery Budget makes major investments to help working families across the five boroughs, including:
 
Investments in Education
  • 100% Fair Student Funding for schools: $600M in FY22
  • Universal Free 3-K For All to make 3K available for every family by September 2023: $377M in FY22
  • Intensive Academic Recovery for Every Student to establish baselines with assessment data, core ELA & Math instruction, tutoring, and teacher planning time: $500M in FY22
  • Increase Information Technology Support, including digital tools that support technology literacy for every student: $155M in FY22
  • Hold Schools Harmless for Mid-Year Adjustments: $130M in FY21
  • Expansion of Restorative Justice for Social Emotional Learning at Middle and High Schools: $12M in FY22
  • Community Schools in Every District by expanding from 266 to 406 community schools citywide: $10M in FY22
  • Public Schools Athletic League (PSAL) expansion to increase access to sports programming across the city for high school students, focusing on schools with greatest need: $6M in FY22 
  • Strengthening Special Education Services including counseling, physical and speech therapy: $236M in FY22  
  • Expanding Early Childhood Special Education: $22M in FY22
 
Support for Young New Yorkers
  • Summer Rising for up to 190,000 young people this summer: $200M in FY22
  • Add 5,000 CUNY Summer Youth Employment slots to bring the total to 75,000 slots: $13M for a total investment of $167M in FY22
 
Public Health Capital of the World
  • Launch NYC Public Health Corps: $50M in FY22
  • Launch New Family Home Visits, health Services to first-time parents in Task Force Neighborhoods and for NYCHA residents: $23M in FY22
  • Expand LifeSci NYC Initiative beyond Life Science Avenue (Manhattan’s East Side) to include the Bronx, Brooklyn and Manhattan’s West Side and increase lab space across NYC: $300M in capital
  • Better prepare for next health emergency with focus on health inequities with the Pandemic Response Institute: $20M in capital
 
Mental Health Recovery
  • Bring Mental Health Crisis Response Citywide, including EMS and social worker teams for urgent non-violent mental health needs: $112M in FY22
  • Expand Mobile Treatment Teams by adding 25 new teams to bring critical mental health services directly to New Yorkers: $23M in FY22
  • Thrive Neighborhood Support Network, adding crisis prevention support by peers and community organizations: $2.5M in FY22
  • Launch Communities Thrive to connect underserved New Yorkers with tele-mental health services: $2M in FY22
  • Create the Behavioral Health Academy to train and support community mental health providers in areas hardest by the pandemic: $1M in FY22
 
Caring for Seniors
  • Launch Community Care Plan to support seniors living at home and in their communities and open 25 more senior centers in underserved communities of color: $39.4M in FY22
  • Invest more in existing senior centers: $10M FY22
 
Non-Profit Support
  • Provide financial stability for human services providers by increasing indirect rates: $120M in FY 21-22
  • Expand emergency food distribution programs including delivery of fresh produce and shelf-stable goods to pantries and community-based organizations: $32M FY22
 
Bring Back Small Businesses
  • Small Businesses Rental Assistance and Grants for Low/Moderate Income Neighborhoods: $100M in FY22
  • Low-Interest Loans for Small Businesses Hit by Pandemic: $30M in FY21 to leverage $70M private investment
  • Commercial Lease Legal assistance in underserved neighborhoods: $5.2M in FY22
 
Bring Tourists Back
  • Launch Largest Tourism Campaign in History with NYC&Co: $25M in FY22
 
A Clean and Green City 
  • City Clean Up Corps to directly hire 10,000 New Yorkers to make the city cleaner and greener: $234M FY22
  • Resume organics collection and expand recycling programs: $33M in FY22
  • Restore litter basket collection service: $9M in FY22
 
Reimagine our Streets
  • Funding for operations and maintenance of 360 speed cameras in FY21 and 600 speed cameras in FY22, bringing total to 2,220 cameras citywide: $46M in FY22
  • Investing to streamline process for Open Restaurants: $8.5M in FY22
  • Community Support for Open Streets: $4M FY22
  • Bike Boulevards, Brooklyn Bridge bike lane: $2M between FY21-22
  • Queensboro Bridge bike lane: $5M in capital
  • Complete the Manhattan Greenway: $723M in capital
 
Public Safety and Criminal Justice
  • CCRB expansion including enhancements launch of CCRB biased-based investigation capacity: $4.1M in FY22
  • Community-Based Hate Crime Prevention for community based organizations to lead neighborhood patrols, do bystander intervention training and provide victim services: $3M in FY22
  • Cure Violence - double workforce then triple workforce, add two new sites,  and increase Anti-Violence Youth Employment: $27M in FY22 
  • Advance Peace to connect mentors with at-risk youth: $6M in FY22
  • Saturday Night Lights will expand to 100 Locations: $7M in FY22
  • Joint Force to End Gun Violence: $1.3M in FY22
 

 

Join Fellow Progressives for our April General Virtual Meeting!


Join Zoom Meeting

Meeting ID: 862 2670 8692

Greetings Bronx Progressives Members!

Hope you're having an awesome April and this message finds you all in great health.   

The trees are blooming, weather is getting warmer, days are getting longer, and a feeling in the air that things are get back to normal. 

We want to thank those that were able to make it last Saturday to our Public Power Launch Rally organized by DSA. The day was perfect for a rally. Great turnout. And boy did we make our presence felt. Our calls for Public Power were loud and clear in front of the Con Edison building at 1775 Grand Concourse.

Morever, it's that time again Bronx Progressives! Join us on Wednesday, April 28 at 7pm to our April general meeting.

We will be joined by Andrea Shapiro with Met Council on Housing, who will join us to report what happened in the recent passing of the New York State budget, and what tenants won with rent relief. 

There is over $2.4 billion in rent relief that will be allocated to tenants in desperate need of assistance. Come learn how these funds need to be distributed, and how we continue to fight for housing justice. 

Agenda:

  • Greetings and Welcomes (2 Mins.)

  • Quick review of the agenda (3 Mins.)

  • House Rules (3 Mins.)

  • Introducing Andrea Shapiro (3 Mins) 

  • Andrea Shapiro gives presentation (20 Mins.)

  • Q&A (10 Mins.)
  1. Working Group Report on Monthly Activities  (10 Mins.)
  • DSA Public Power Launch Rally (5 Mins)
  • In-person Community Canvassing (5 Mins)
  • New York Health Act Phone Banks (5 Mins. Gene Binder) 
  • Increasing membership (5 Mins.)

      2. New Business/Announcements (20 Mins.)      

Adjourn

Bronx Progressives is inviting you to a scheduled Zoom meeting.

Topic: Bronx Progressives April Virtual General Meeting 
Time: Apr 28, 2021 07:00 PM Eastern Time (US and Canada)

Join Zoom Meeting

Meeting ID: 862 2670 8692

U.S. Government Seizes Oil Tanker Used To Violate U.S. And U.N. Sanctions Against North Korea

 

Singaporean National Kwek Kee Seng Charged with Federal Crimes Related to Alleged Leadership Role in Scheme to use the M/T Courageous to Violate Sanctions

 Audrey Strauss, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, John C. Demers, the Assistant Attorney General for National Security, and William F. Sweeney Jr., the Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), announced the filing of a criminal complaint charging KWEK KEE SENG with conspiring to evade economic sanctions on the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (“DPRK” or “North Korea”) and money laundering conspiracy.  In addition to these criminal charges, a civil forfeiture complaint was filed against M/T Courageous, an oil products tanker purchased and operated by KWEK to make illicit deliveries of petroleum products through ship-to-ship transfers with North Korean vessels and direct shipments to the North Korean port of Nampo. 

M/T Courageous

The M/T Courageous

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said:  “As alleged, Kwek Kee Seng conspired to violate international sanctions by arranging illicit deliveries of petroleum products to North Korea, and used front companies and false documentation to send money through the U.S. financial system in furtherance of his support for that pariah state.  As a result of his illegal activities, not only does Kwek face criminal charges, but his sanctions-evading ship, the Courageous, has been seized and will no longer enable North Korea’s pattern of evading the global community’s prohibitions on support for that regime.  Thanks to the extraordinary cooperation between U.S. and Cambodian law enforcement authorities, the Courageous is out of service.  This Office has pioneered the deployment of the full array of criminal and civil enforcement tools to curb North Korea’s deceptive and illicit activities, and today’s actions send a message that anyone who supports the DPRK’s sanctions-busting efforts stands to lose both their liberty and their property.”

Assistant Attorney General John C. Demers said:  “The seizure of the Courageous is another step in sinking North Korea’s efforts to circumvent sanctions on the high seas.  The United States will continue to enforce sanctions on North Korea through civil forfeiture actions and criminal prosecutions to ensure that the North Korean government – and the private entities that enable this regime by prioritizing personal profit over global security – are held accountable.”

FBI Assistant Director William F. Sweeney Jr. said:  “In case our message wasn't clear when we seized M/V Wise Honest in May 2019, our seizure of M/T Courageous should serve as another signal of our intentions: the FBI will not allow adversaries to evade sanctions designed to protect our nation. Kwek is now a fugitive on our radar, and his ship is now ours. We are grateful to our international partners who have worked with us to ensure the safety of the citizens we serve."

According to the criminal and civil documents filed today in Manhattan federal court:[1]

Pursuant to the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) and the North Korea Sanctions and Policy Enhancement Act of 2016 (NKSPEA), the DPRK and individuals or entities that the Department of the Treasury, Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) has determined are involved in the facilitation of proliferation of weapons of mass destruction are prohibited from engaging in transactions with U.S. persons or using the U.S. financial system. The United Nations Security Council has similarly imposed economic sanctions on North Korea, prohibiting among other things the conduct of ship-to-ship transfers with DPRK-flagged vessels and the provision of petroleum products to the DPRK.

For a four-month period between August and December 2019, M/T Courageous illicitly stopped transmitting location information, during which time satellite imagery shows that M/T Courageous engaged in a ship-to-ship transfer of more than $1.5 million worth of oil to a North Korean ship, the Saebyol, which had been designated by OFAC, and traveled to the North Korean port of Nampo. Seng and his co-conspirators took additional steps to hide the scheme by (1) operating a series of shell companies, (2) lying to international shipping authorities about M/T Courageous’ dealings with North Korea, and (3) falsely identifying M/T Courageous as another ship in order to evade detection.

In furtherance of the scheme, Seng and his co-conspirators arranged for a variety of payments, denominated in U.S. dollars, that were processed through U.S.-based correspondent accounts to purchase oil – including more than $1.5 million to purchase the oil that was transferred to the Saebyol, over $500,000 to buy M/T Courageous, and thousands more dollars to procure necessary services for M/T Courageous and another vessel, including registration fees, ship materials and salary payments for crewmembers. Seng and his co-conspirators overseas sought to conceal these sanctions-evading transactions by, among other things, using front companies to disguise the nature of the transactions; disguising location information for vessels carrying illicit shipments; and conducting ship-to-ship fuel transfers on the open sea in an attempt to hide their counterparties, such as the Saebyol

Cambodian authorities seized M/T Courageous in March of 2020, and have been holding the vessel pursuant to a U.S. seizure warrant, which was issued under seal on April 2, 2020. 

KWEK, 61, of Singapore, is charged with conspiring to violate the IEEPA and to commit money laundering.  Each count carries a maximum term of 20 years in prison.  The maximum potential sentences are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge.

KWEK KEE SENG remains at large.  The United States looks forward to working with our foreign partners to bring KWEK to justice.

Ms. Strauss praised the outstanding investigative work of the FBI and its New York Field Office, Counterintelligence Division.  Ms. Strauss also thanked the FBI Legal Attaché Office in Phnom Penh, Cambodia; the Department of Justice’s National Security Division, Counterintelligence and Export Control Section, Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section’s Program Operations Unit, and Office of International Affairs; the United States Coast Guard; the Cambodian Ministry of Justice; and the Cambodian National Police, for their assistance.

The charges in the Complaint are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.             

[1] As the introductory phrase signifies, the entirety of the text of the Complaint and the description of the Complaint set forth herein, constitute only allegations, and every fact described should be treated as an allegation against Kwek.