Friday, October 11, 2024

VCJC News & Notes 10/11/24

 

Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
News and Notes

Here's this week's edition of the VCJC News and Notes email. We hope you enjoy it and find it useful!

Reminders

  1. Shabbos

    Shabbos information is, as always, available on our website, both in the information sidebar and the events calendar.
    Here are the times you need:  

    Erev Yom Kippur – Friday, October 11

    Mincha 2:00 pm  
    Candle Lighting 6:03 pm    
    Kol Nidre 6:10 pm    
    Yom Kippur – Saturday, October 12  
    Shacharit 8:15 am  
    Yizkor approx. 10:30 am
    Neilah 5:45 pm  
    Yom Tov/Fast ends 7:06 pm  

    If you require an aliyah or would like to lead services, read from the torah or haftorah please speak to one of the gabbaim.
     

  2. Holiday Services and times for next week

    Erev Sukkot – Wednesday, October 16  
    Candle Lighting 5:55 pm  
    Mincha/Maariv 6:00 pm    
    Sukkot – Thursday, October 17
    Shacharit 8:40 am  
    Mincha/Maariv 6:00 pm  
    Candle Lighting after 6:56 pm
    Sukkot - Friday, October 18
    Shacharit 8:40 am

    Candle Lighting 5:52 pm

    Mincha/Maariv 6:00 pm

    Shabbos - Saturday, October 19
    Shabbos morning services at 8:40 am
    Shabbos Ends 6:55 pm


  3. Yizkor
    Yizkor will be said on Shabbos, Yom Kippur.
    It is customary to make a charitable donation in conjunction with Yizkor.  If you wish to donate to VCJC as part of your Yizkor observance, it can be done in person at the office, by check, or online through our website


Our mailing address is:

Van Cortlandt Jewish Center
3880 Sedgwick Ave
Bronx, NY 10463

Drug Maker Teva Pharmaceuticals Agrees to Pay $450M in False Claims Act Settlement to Resolve Kickback Allegations Relating to Copayments and Price Fixing

 

Teva Pharmaceuticals USA Inc. (Teva USA) and Teva Neuroscience Inc. (collectively, Teva) have agreed to pay $450 million to resolve two matters that allege Teva violated the Anti-Kickback Statute (AKS) and the False Claims Act (FCA). Teva, headquartered in Parsippany, New Jersey, is the largest generic drug manufacturer in the United States. The settlement amount was based on Teva’s ability to pay.

“Kickbacks designed to induce referrals or purchases of healthcare goods or services distort physician and patient decision-making, thwart competition and bypass controls put in place to protect federal health care programs,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “The Justice Department is committed to pursuing those who engage in kickback violations, including drug manufacturers, to ensure that federal health care programs continue to serve the interests of taxpayers and program beneficiaries.”

The settlement encompasses two alleged kickback schemes. First, Teva has agreed to resolve allegations in a complaint the United States filed in the District of Massachusetts in August 2020 that Teva violated and conspired to violate the AKS and FCA by paying Medicare patients’ cost sharing obligations (copays) for the multiple sclerosis drug Copaxone from 2006 through 2017, while steadily raising Copaxone’s price. In particular, the United States alleged that Teva coordinated and conspired with multiple third parties, including a specialty pharmacy and two allegedly independent copay assistance foundations, to ensure that purported donations to the foundations were used specifically to cover the copays of Medicare Copaxone patients, which Teva knew was prohibited by the AKS, and that Teva thereby caused the submission of false claims to Medicare.

Second, Teva USA has agreed to resolve separate allegations that it conspired with other generic drug manufacturers to fix prices for pravastatin, a drug widely used to treat high cholesterol and triglyceride levels, as well as two other generic drugs, clotrimazole and tobramycin. Teva USA previously entered into a deferred prosecution agreement with the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division to resolve related criminal charges. Teva USA paid a criminal penalty of $225 million and admitted to conspiring with three other generic drug companies to fix prices on certain generic drugs. Under the civil settlement announced today, Teva agreed to resolve allegations that the benefits it received under its price fixing scheme constituted illegal kickbacks.

Teva will pay collectively $450 million to resolve the two kickback schemes. This payment is in addition to the criminal penalty paid by Teva USA under its deferred prosecution agreement. 

“Kickback arrangements by pharmaceutical companies escalate the costs for critical drugs used by our citizens and federal health care programs,” said U.S. Attorney Jacqueline Romero for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania. “My office is proud to work with the rest of the Department of Justice and our investigative partners to enforce federal laws prohibiting kickback arrangements. We will continue to take action to lower the drug costs for our country and its health care programs supporting senior citizens, our military service members and others.”

“For far too long, Teva gamed the charitable foundation process by paying kickbacks through two foundations, and with the aid of a specialty pharmacy. Those kickbacks undermined the purpose of the Medicare co-pay system and violated the Anti-Kickback Statute,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Joshua S. Levy for the District of Massachusetts. “This office has taken the leading role in cracking down on these highly lucrative schemes that drive up the cost of essential drugs by bringing multiple enforcement actions that have returned more than $1 billion to the Medicare system. We will continue to pursue these actions to ensure that all pharmaceutical companies play by the rules and to protect the American taxpayers.

“The Medicare program’s copay structure serves as a safeguard against the artificial inflation of drug prices. When a pharmaceutical company manipulates drug prices through collusion, or disguises kickbacks as charitable donations to subsidize copays for its own drugs, the integrity of the Medicare program is jeopardized,” said Assistant Inspector General for Investigations Adam Globerman of the Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector General (HHS-OIG). “This type of conduct is unacceptable, and HHS-OIG remains committed to thoroughly pursuing allegations of price fixing and kickbacks that put the Medicare program at risk.”

“The Defense Criminal Investigative Service, the law enforcement arm of the Department of Defense Office of Inspector General, seeks to protect the integrity of TRICARE, the healthcare system for U.S. military members and their dependents,” said Special Agent in Charge Patrick J. Hegarty of DCIS Northeast Field Office. “When pharmaceutical corporations artificially inflate prices, they place an unnecessary financial burden on the TRICARE program. The settlement agreement announced today demonstrates our commitment to partner with investigative agencies and the Department of Justice, including the Civil Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, to combat healthcare fraud.”

Since 2017, the United States has collected over $1 billion, in addition to today’s settlement, from pharmaceutical companies that allegedly used third-party foundations as conduits to unlawfully pay patient copays. The department has also reached settlements with four foundations and a specialty pharmacy pertaining to those allegations. Today’s resolution with Teva is the largest of these settlements to date. The settlement of Teva’s price fixing conduct is the seventh pertaining to allegations of price fixing involving generic drugs, with total recoveries exceeding $500 million.

The government’s pursuit of these matters illustrates the department’s emphasis on combating health care fraud. One of the most powerful tools in this effort is the False Claims Act. Tips and complaints from all sources about potential fraud, waste, abuse and mismanagement can be reported to HHS at 800‑HHS‑TIPS (800-447-8477).

The resolution of the patient copay matter was the result of a coordinated effort between the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud Section, and U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Massachusetts, with investigative support from HHS-OIG and the FBI.

Attorneys Douglas Rosenthal and Nelson Wagner of the Civil Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Abraham R. George, Diane Seol and Evan Panich for the District of Massachusetts handled the matter.

The civil resolution of the price fixing matter was the result of a coordinated effort between the Fraud Section and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, with investigative support from HHS-OIG, the Defense Health Agency Program Integrity Office, DCIS and Office of Inspector General for the Department of Veterans Affairs.

Bronx Man Convicted Of Robberies And Firearms Offense

 

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced the conviction in Manhattan federal court of JAMES KELLY for robbing two delis in the Bronx, New York, on October 10, 2021 and January 15, 2023, and brandishing a firearm in connection with the 2023 robberyThe jury convicted KELLY following a four-day trial before U.S. District Judge Gregory H. Woods. 

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “James Kelly used a firearm to intimidate and threaten the lives of working New Yorkers, all to steal money from their delis. Today, a unanimous jury of his peers held Kelly accountable for his crimes.  We thank our law enforcement partners for their relentless pursuit of justice for the victims and the public." 

According to the allegations in the Indictment and the evidence presented during trial and court proceedings:

On October 10, 2021, KELLY entered a deli in the Bronx with his hands in his pocket, purporting to have a gun.  He got close to a deli employee working alone in the store, threatened to shoot him, and demanded cash and marijuana.  After the deli employee gave KELLY cash, KELLY ordered the deli employee to get down on the ground and said that if the employee moved, he would “shoot the shit” out of the employee.  Fifteen months later, on January 15, 2023, KELLY robbed another deli in the Bronx, pointed a gun at two deli employees, again demanded cash and threatened to shoot them, and again ordered them to get on the ground.

KELLY, 32, of the Bronx, New York, was convicted of two counts of Hobbs Act robbery, each of which carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison; and one count of the use, carrying, and possession of a firearm, which was brandished, which carries a mandatory minimum sentence of seven years in prison and a maximum sentence of life in prison.

The statutory minimum and maximum penalties are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant would be determined by the judge.  KELLY is scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Woods on January 14, 2025.

Mr. Williams praised the outstanding investigative work of the New York City Police Department’s Bronx Violent Crimes Squad and the investigators of the Office.

Attorney General James Reminds New Yorkers to be Cautious in Charitable Giving for Hurricane Relief

 

New Yorkers Should Look Out for Sham Charities, Make Sure They Are Giving to Trustworthy Organizations

New York Attorney General Letitia James provided reminders and tips to New Yorkers who are seeking to provide support to victims of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton. The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) warns that New Yorkers should be wary of sham charities attempting to take advantage of this crisis and ensure that they are giving to legitimate charitable organizations. 

“In the wake of terrible humanitarian crises such as the hurricanes in the Southeastern United States, scammers often take advantage of generous acts in exchange for personal gain,” said Attorney General James. “As New Yorkers seek to provide aid to victims of Hurricane Helene and Hurricane Milton, I urge them to be cautious of sham charities and make sure that they are giving to trustworthy organizations and groups. We will continue to do all we can to support victims of these terrible tragedies and I encourage anyone who experiences any issues to reach out to my office.” 

In the wake of disasters like hurricanes, fraudulent organizations can try to take advantage of New Yorkers’ good intentions. New Yorkers seeking to donate to disaster relief efforts should consider the following tips and guidelines:

  • Solicited by Email? Find Out Who Is Soliciting. If you receive a solicitation by email, find out who is behind that email address. Contact the charity whose name is in the email or visit its website to find out if the email is really from the charity. Do not give personal information or your credit card number in response to an email solicitation unless you have checked out the charity. 
     
  • Be Careful When Giving Through Social Media or Other Fundraising Sites. Before giving through social media or fundraising sites, research the identity of the organizer of the fundraising efforts and ask the same questions you would of a charity. Online platforms that host groups and individuals soliciting for causes may not thoroughly vet those who use their service. Donors should only give to campaigns conducted by people whom they know. Donors also should take a close look at the site’s FAQs and Terms and Conditions to see what fees will be charged. Also, don’t assume that charities recommended on social media sites, blogs, or other websites have already been vetted. Research the charity yourself to confirm that the charity is aware of the campaign and has given its approved permission for the use of its name or logo. If available, sign up for updates from the campaign organizer to keep abreast of how contributions to the campaign are being spent.  
     
  • Check Before Giving. Donate to charities you are familiar with and carefully review information about the charity before you give. Check a website like https://disasterphilanthropy.org/to find out which charities are at the aid forefront. Most charities are required to register and file financial reports with OAG's Charities Bureau if they solicit contributions from New Yorkers. Check OAG’s website for financial reports of charities or ask the charity directly for its reports. 
     
  • Ask How Your Donation Will Be Used. Find out how the charity plans to use your donation, including the services and individuals your donation will support. Find out more than just the cause. Find out what organization or entity will receive the money and what programs it conducts or what services it provides.
     
  • Look Into Newly Formed Organizations Carefully. Often, in the aftermath of tragedies, new organizations emerge to meet community needs. While most of these organizations are well-intentioned, and some may provide innovative forms of assistance, some may not have the experience or infrastructure to follow through on their promises, and some may turn out to be scams.
     
  • Exercise Caution Before You Text A Contribution. Check the charity’s website or call the charity to confirm it has authorized contributions to be made via text message. 
     
  • Don't Give Cash. Give directly to the charity either by check made payable to the organization or through the charity's website.  
     
  • Be Careful About Personal Information. Be cautious before giving credit card or personal information over the phone, by text message, or via the internet. In all cases, make sure you are familiar with the organization to which you give such information and check to see that the fundraising campaign is legitimate.  
     
  • Report Suspicious Organizations. If you believe an organization is misrepresenting its work, or that a fundraising or charitable scam is taking place, please file a complaint with the Charities Bureau, or call 212-416-8401. 

Statement from NYC Comptroller Lander on NYS Chief Administrative Judge Zayas’s Commitment to Reduce Case Delays for People Detained in City Jails

 

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander responded to the New York State Office of Court Administration’s (OCA) new initiative to speed up case-processing for Rikers Island pre-trial detainees with the following statement: 

NYS Chief Administrative Judge Joseph A. Zayas demonstrated the leadership and innovation that New York needs to reduce case delays in City jails by advancing reforms, in line with my office’s recent recommendations, to ensure that no one is left waiting three years in the inhumane and violent conditions of Rikers Island for their day in court.  

“From 2019-2023, case delays in New York’s courts increased by 179% for felony cases, which dramatically inflated New York City’s jail population. Today’s announcement by Judge Zayas and OCA to set firm but realistic deadlines for discovery compliance, to triage and expedite criminal cases, and to implement a citywide calendaring system will go a long way toward creating a more efficient and fair criminal court system. 

“These commitments by OCA have the potential to save the City a substantial amount of money; our report on ‘Ensuring Timely Trials’ found that aligning with national standards for case processing could save the City as much as $877 million annually. They will make sure that individuals are not forced to endure cruel and inhumane conditions like Kalief Browder, who spent three years at Rikers, much of it in solitary confinement, awaiting trial on charges that he stole a backpack. And by reducing the time people spend awaiting trial at Rikers, and therefore the number of people who are in jail each day, these reforms will make it much more possible for New York City to close Rikers Island.  

“Unfortunately, the Courts alone cannot reduce the City’s jail population to meet the legal obligation to close Rikers. While the City is making progress toward constructing the Borough Based Jails, City Hall has lost focus on the critical inter-agency work and leadership needed to close Rikers, as required by law. The Adams Administration is years behind in building the secure hospital beds at H+H facilities that will move people who need specialized medical care off Rikers. They are without any real plan or meaningful effort to provide effective mental health services to the 20% of detained people with severe mental illness. And they have failed to strengthen supervised release and alternatives to incarceration programs proven to prevent recidivism.  

“The Adams Administration’s failure to reduce the jail population is especially bleak against the backdrop of gross mismanagement at the Department of Correction (DOC). With persistent violence, dysfunction, and deaths in custody, Judge Laura T. Swain took the first serious steps toward putting management of Rikers Island into the hands of a federal receiver just days before scandal-plagued Deputy Mayor for Public Safety Phil Banks, who was supposedly responsible for supervising DOC, resigned.  

“Thank you to Chief Administrative Judge Zayas and OCA for committing to reforms that will advance justice, reduce needless detention, save New York City taxpayer dollars, and make it more possible to close Rikers Island. Now, New Yorkers need and deserve better management and leadership from City Hall to create a safer and more humane city.”  

FOUR RIKERS ISLAND INMATES INDICTED IN BRUTAL JAIL SLASHING

 

Defendants Beat and Cut Inmate; Victim’s Face Required 45 Stitches

Bronx District Attorney Darcel D. Clark announced that four Rikers Island inmates have been indicted on first-degree Gang Assault and related charges for an attack that left an inmate scarred for life. 

District Attorney Clark said, “The four defendants allegedly beat and slashed the victim over a petty gang-related beef. He required 45 stitches to his face. We will not tolerate gang violence in the jail.” 

District Attorney Clark said the defendants Jamaud Cayenne, 21, David Mingo, 21, Damien Linares, 19, and Tony Smith, 20, were indicted on two counts of first-degree Assault, first-degree Gang Assault, second-degree Gang Assault, three counts of second-degree Assault, and thirddegree Assault. Cayenne and Mingo were also indicted on first-degree Promoting Prison Contraband, second-degree Promoting Prison Contraband, and fourth-degree Criminal Possession of a Weapon. Mingo faces an additional charge of third-degree Criminal Possession of Weapon. Mingo and Smith were arraigned today by Bronx Supreme Court Justice Brenda Rivera and are due back in court on December 12, 2024. The other two defendants will be arraigned at a later date. 

According to the investigation, on March 17, 2024, the victim tried to enter a locked dayroom in the Robern N. Davoren Complex where the defendants, alleged members of a Blood set, were located. The defendants took it as a sign of aggression and allegedly attacked. Cayenne and Linares punched and kicked him in the face and body. Mingo allegedly hit him in the face. Cayenne then allegedly slashed the inmate’s face with a sharp object. Smith allegedly kicked the victim. A Correction Officer deployed a chemical agent to diffuse the situation. The detainee received 45 stiches to the right side of his face and carries a scar.

District Attorney Clark thanked the New York City Department of Correction Intelligence Bureau, specifically Investigators James Ruiz, Jeffrey Rios, Walter Holmes, Juan Rivera, and Steven DeJesus for their work in the investigation.

An indictment is an accusatory instrument and not proof of a defendant’s guilt. 

Governor Hochul Highlights $665 Million to Make Local Water Infrastructure Projects Affordable Across New York State

Water pouring from faucet

Includes More Than $450 Million to Finance Clean Water Projects in New York City

Approval of Financial Assistance Authorizes Municipal Access to the Capital Needed for Projects that Reduce Risks to Public Health and the Environment 


Governor Kathy Hochul announced the Environmental Facilities Corporation Board of Directors approved $665 million in financial assistance for water infrastructure improvement projects across New York State. The board's approval authorizes municipal access to low-cost financing and previously announced grants to get shovels in the ground for vital environmental infrastructure projects, including treatment processes to remove emerging contaminants from drinking water.

“No one in New York should ever fear that they don’t have access to clean water,” Governor Hochul said. “With this funding, we are safeguarding the health and well-being of New Yorkers, providing critical resources to local economies, creating jobs and protecting our natural resources.”

This investment includes more than $450 million in low-cost financing for New York City, fully funding the city’s request for financial assistance for 13 sewer projects. The action reinforces the State’s key role in advancing the City’s clean water goals and minimizing the financial impact of these crucial projects on local ratepayers. EFC is committed to ensuring the City’s water infrastructure improvements are affordable. In addition to the funding approved today, EFC executed a $717 million bond sale earlier this year to fund ongoing and completed projects, saving city ratepayers $183 million.

Clean Water Projects:

  • Albany Municipal Water Finance Authority - $1,680,000 grant and $1,680,000 interest-free financing from BIL for the planning, design, and construction of stormwater improvements.
  • City of Amsterdam - $8,758,500 grant and $7,041,500 interest-free financing from BIL, and a $4,300,000 WIIA grant for the design and construction of wastewater treatment plant improvements.
  • Village of Holley - $2,061,338 interest-free and $783,016 market-rate financing from the CWSRF, and a $405,646 WIIA grant for the planning, design, and construction of wastewater treatment plant upgrades and disinfection improvements.
  • City of Kingston - $4,080,000 BIL grant for the planning, design, and construction of wastewater treatment plant and outfall upgrades.
  • New York City Municipal Water Finance Authority - $454,275,734 financing from the CWSRF for the planning, design, and construction of projects associated with the Wards Island, Bowery Bay, Jamaica, Coney Island, Red Hook, and Owls Head water resource recovery facilities; the Gowanus Canal combined sewer overflow abatement project; and various pumping stations.
  • Oneida County - $10,538,500 grant, $7,701,000 interest-free and $817,750 market rate financing from BIL; $817,750 interest-free financing from the CWSRF, and a $6,625,000 WIIA grant for the planning, design, and construction of a collection system rehabilitation project.
  • Town of Poughkeepsie - $3,303,958 interest-free and $7,732,138 market-rate financing from the CWSRF, and a $691,904 WIIA grant for the planning, design, and construction associated with the relocation of a pump station.
  • Village of Remsen - $152,500 grant and $278,500 interest-free financing from BIL, and $256,892 market-rate financing from the CWSRF for the planning, design, and construction of a wastewater treatment disinfection facility.
  • Town of Savannah - $151,232 grant and $425,632 interest-free financing from BIL, $149,984 interest-free and $597,536 market-rate financing from the CWSRF, and a $75,616 WIIA grant for the planning, design, and construction of a disinfection system at the wastewater treatment plant.
  • Village of Sherburne - $8,887,500 grant and $9,862,500 interest-free financing from BIL, $10,000,000 market-rate financing from the CWSRF, and a $8,729,104 WIIA grant for the planning, design and construction of wastewater treatment plant upgrades.
  • Village of Tivoli - $6,696,575 grant and $8,971,191 interest-free financing from BIL for the planning, design, and construction of improvements to the wastewater collection and treatment system.

Drinking Water Projects:

  • Town of Beekmantown - $838,166 market-rate financing from the DWSRF and a $3,000,000 WIIA grant to identify locations for new wells, development of two to three new groundwater supply wells, construction of a water treatment plant equipped with chemical disinfection, and transmission mains to connect the wells to the water treatment plant.
  • Carle Place Water District - $4,589,400 WIIA grant for the installation of two granular activated carbon (GAC) absorption treatment systems and associated appurtenances at Wells 3 and 4 to treat perfluorooctanoic acid (PFOA) and perfluorooctane sulfonic acid (PFOS) contamination.
  • Town of Elizabethtown - $1,815,000 grant and $1,901,000 interest-free financing from the DWSRF for the installation of two new production wells, construction of a water treatment plant equipped with chemical disinfection for the new wells, rehabilitation of an existing water treatment plant utilizing chemical disinfection for the existing wells, and miscellaneous water system improvements including the installation of meter vaults, transmission main from the proposed wells to the new treatment plant, and related site piping.
  • Village of Endicott - Financial assistance for two projects:
    • $4,491,285 interest-free and $8,982,568 market-rate financing from the DWSRF, and a $5,000,000 WIIA grant for additional water treatment to remove iron, manganese and 1,4-dioxane contamination.
    • $2,924,087 interest-free financing from the DWSRF and two WIIA grants totaling $4,386,131 for the development of a new water source to replace an existing contaminated water source.
  • Village of Frankfort - $3,385,000 interest-free financing from the DWSRF and a $3,000,000 WIIA grant for various upgrades to the water distribution system and well site.
  • Village of Hamburg - $5,000,000 WIIA grant for the installation of a new 1.25-million-gallon water storage tank, new transmission mains of approximately 6,000 linear feet, and a new pump station.
  • Village of Mineola - $5,000,000 WIIA grant for the installation of a new GAC filtration system to remove PFOA and PFOS at Well No. 1.
  • Village of Odessa - $708,392 BIL grant and a $2,996,295 WIIA grant for a two-phase project. Phase I includes the installation of approximately 20,000 feet of replacement 6, 8, 10 and 12-inch C-900 PVC water main and associated appurtenances. Phase II includes the development of a new water treatment plant for filtration of existing sources, the replacement of well pumps, and the installation of all associated treatment equipment and controls.
  • Roslyn Water District - $2,984,700 WIIA grant for the installation of a GAC treatment system at Plant No. 5 to remove PFAS.
  • Suffolk County Water Authority - $1,850,000 BIL grant for the installation of 21,000 linear feet of water main in the Hamlet of Calverton.

Refinancing Completed Projects Will Achieve Long-Term Debt Service Savings

The board also took action to help ensure continued, long-term affordability of existing projects. The board approved long-term, interest-free financing totaling more than $24 million for projects undertaken by the City of Kingston, Town of Rockland, and Villages of Copenhagen, Hammondsport, Ilion, and South Glen Falls.

Short-term financing provides capital for design and construction of projects. Once project construction is completed, the short-term financing is typically refinanced with long-term financing for up to 30 years, saving municipalities significant interest expenses versus financing on their own. This is in addition to the benefit of EFC-administered grants. Based on current market conditions, these long-term financings are projected to save local ratepayers an estimated $38 million over the life of the financings.

New York's Commitment to Water Quality

New York State continues to increase its nation-leading investments in water infrastructure, including more than $2.2 billion in financial assistance from EFC for local water infrastructure projects in State Fiscal Year 2024 alone. With $500 million allocated for clean water infrastructure in the FY24 Enacted Budget announced by Governor Hochul, New York will have invested a total of $5.5 billion in water infrastructure between 2017 and this year.

Governor Hochul’s State of the State initiatives are helping to ensure ongoing coordination with local governments and ensure communities can leverage these investments. The Governor increased WIIA grants for wastewater projects from 25 to 50 percent of net eligible project costs for small, disadvantaged communities. The Governor also expanded EFC’s Community Assistance Teams to help small, rural and disadvantaged communities leverage this funding and address their clean water infrastructure needs. Any community that needs help with its water infrastructure is encouraged to contact EFC.


Thursday, October 10, 2024

TD Bank Pleads Guilty to Bank Secrecy Act and Money Laundering Conspiracy Violations in $1.8B Resolution

 

TD Bank N.A. (TDBNA), the 10th largest bank in the United States, and its parent company TD Bank US Holding Company (TDBUSH) (together with TDBNA, TD Bank) pleaded guilty today and agreed to pay over $1.8 billion in penalties to resolve the Justice Department’s investigation into violations of the Bank Secrecy Act (BSA) and money laundering. 

TDBNA pleaded guilty to conspiring to fail to maintain an anti-money laundering (AML) program that complies with the BSA, fail to file accurate Currency Transaction Reports (CTRs), and launder money. TDBUSH pleaded guilty to causing TDBNA to fail to maintain an AML program that complies with the BSA and to fail to file accurate CTRs.

TD Bank’s guilty pleas are part of a coordinated resolution with the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve Board (FRB), as well as the Treasury Department’s Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) and Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN).

“By making its services convenient for criminals, TD Bank became one,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “Today, TD Bank also became the largest bank in U.S. history to plead guilty to Bank Secrecy Act program failures, and the first US bank in history to plead guilty to conspiracy to commit money laundering. TD Bank chose profits over compliance with the law — a decision that is now costing the bank billions of dollars in penalties. Let me be clear: our investigation continues, and no individual involved in TD Bank’s illegal conduct is off limits.”

“For years, TD Bank starved its compliance program of the resources needed to obey the law. Today’s historic guilty plea, including the largest penalty ever imposed under the Bank Secrecy Act, offers an unmistakable lesson: crime doesn’t pay — and neither does flouting compliance,” said Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco. “Every bank compliance official in America should be reviewing today’s charges as a case study of what not to do. And every bank CEO and board member should be doing the same. Because if the business case for compliance wasn’t clear before — it should be now.”

“For nearly a decade, TD Bank failed to update its anti-money laundering compliance program to address known risks. As bank employees acknowledged in internal communications, these failures made the bank an ‘easy target’ for the ‘bad guys.’ These failures also allowed corrupt bank employees to facilitate a criminal network’s laundering of tens of millions of dollars,” said Principal Assistant Attorney General Nicole M. Argentieri, head of the Justice Department's Criminal Division. “U.S. financial institutions are the first line of defense against money laundering and illicit finance. When they participate in crime rather than prevent it, we will not hesitate to hold them accountable to the fullest extent of the law.” 

“TD Bank prioritized growth and convenience over following its legal obligations,” said U.S. Attorney Philip R. Sellinger for the District of New Jersey. “As a result of staggering and pervasive failures in oversight, it willfully failed to monitor trillions of dollars of transactions – including those involving ACH transactions, checks, high-risk countries, and peer-to-peer transactions – which allowed hundreds of millions of dollars from money laundering networks to flow through the bank, including for international drug traffickers. The bank was aware of these risks and failed to take steps to protect against them, including for two networks prosecuted in New Jersey and elsewhere – one that dumped piles of cash on the bank’s counters and another that allegedly withdrew amounts from ATMs 40 to 50 times higher than the daily limit for personal accounts.”

According to court documents, between January 2014 and October 2023, TD Bank had long-term, pervasive, and systemic deficiencies in its U.S. AML policies, procedures, and controls but failed to take appropriate remedial action. Instead, senior executives at TD Bank enforced a budget mandate, referred to internally as a “flat cost paradigm,” requiring that TD Bank’s budget not increase year-over-year, despite its profits and risk profile increasing significantly over the same period. Although TD Bank maintained elements of an AML program that appeared adequate on paper, fundamental, widespread flaws in its AML program made TD Bank an “easy target” for perpetrators of financial crime.

Over the last decade, TD Bank’s federal regulators and TD Bank’s own internal audit group repeatedly identified concerns about its transaction monitoring program, a key element of an appropriate AML program necessary to properly detect and report suspicious activities. Nonetheless, from 2014 through 2022, TD Bank’s transaction monitoring program remained effectively static, and did not adapt to address known, glaring deficiencies; emerging money laundering risks; or TD Bank’s new products and services. For years, TD Bank failed to appropriately fund and staff its AML program, opting to postpone and cancel necessary AML projects prioritizing a “flat cost paradigm” and the “customer experience.”

Throughout this time, TD Bank intentionally did not automatically monitor all domestic automated clearinghouse (ACH) transactions, most check activity, and numerous other transaction types, resulting in 92% of total transaction volume going unmonitored from Jan. 1, 2018, to April 12, 2024. This amounted to approximately $18.3 trillion of transaction activity. TD Bank also added no new transaction monitoring scenarios and made no material changes to existing transaction monitoring scenarios from at least 2014 through late 2022; implemented new products and services, like Zelle, without ensuring appropriate transaction monitoring coverage; failed to meaningfully monitor transactions involving high-risk countries; instructed stores to stop filing internal unusual transaction reports on certain suspicious customers; and permitted more than $5 billion in transactional activity to occur in accounts even after the bank decided to close them.

TD Bank’s AML failures made it “convenient” for criminals, in the words of its employees. These failures enabled three money laundering networks to collectively transfer more than $670 million through TD Bank accounts between 2019 and 2023. Between January 2018 and February 2021, one money laundering network processed more than $470 million through the bank through large cash deposits into nominee accounts. The operators of this scheme provided employees gift cards worth more than $57,000 to ensure employees would continue to process their transactions. And even though the operators of this scheme were clearly depositing cash well over $10,000 in suspicious transactions, TD Bank employees did not identify the conductor of the transaction in required reports. In a second scheme between March 2021 and March 2023, a high-risk jewelry business moved nearly $120 million through shell accounts before TD Bank reported the activity. In a third scheme, money laundering networks deposited funds in the United States and quickly withdrew those funds using ATMs in Colombia. Five TD Bank employees conspired with this network and issued dozens of ATM cards for the money launderers, ultimately conspiring in the laundering of approximately $39 million. The Justice Department has charged over two dozen individuals across these schemes, including two bank insiders. TD Bank’s plea agreement requires continued cooperation in ongoing investigations of individuals.

As part of the plea agreement, TD Bank has agreed to forfeit $452,432,302.00 and pay a criminal fine of $1,434,513,478.40, for a total financial penalty of $1,886,945,780.40. TD Bank has also agreed to retain an independent compliance monitor for three years and to remediate and enhance its AML compliance program. TD Bank has separately reached agreements with the FRB, OCC, and FinCEN, and the Justice Department will credit $123.5 million of the forfeiture toward the FRB’s resolution.

The Justice Department reached its resolution with TD Bank based on a number of factors, including the nature, seriousness, and pervasiveness of the offenses, as a result of which TD Bank became the bank of choice for multiple money laundering organizations and criminal actors and processed hundreds of millions of dollars in money laundering transactions. Although TD Bank did not voluntarily disclose its wrongdoing, it received partial credit for its strong cooperation with the Department’s investigation and the ongoing remediation of its AML program. TD Bank did not receive full credit for its cooperation because it failed to timely escalate relevant AML concerns to the Department during the investigation. Accordingly, the total criminal penalty reflects a 20% reduction based on the bank’s partial cooperation and remediation.

IRS Criminal Investigation, the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Office of Inspector General, and Drug Enforcement Administration investigated the case. The Morristown Police Department, U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Puerto Rico, Homeland Security Investigations, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and New York City Police Department provided substantial assistance.

Trial Attorneys D. Zachary Adams and Chelsea R. Rooney of the Criminal Division’s Money Laundering and Asset Recovery Section (MLARS) and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Mark J. Pesce and Angelica Sinopole for the District of New Jersey prosecuted the case.

MLARS’ Bank Integrity Unit investigates and prosecutes banks and other financial institutions, including their officers, managers, and employees, whose actions threaten the integrity of the individual institution or the wider financial system. Since its creation in 2010, the Bank Integrity Unit has prosecuted financial institutions for violations of the BSA, money laundering, sanctions, and other laws, imposing total penalties of over $25 billion.

This effort is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) operation. OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the United States using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach. Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at www.justice.gov/OCDETF.