Glauber’s Scheme to Falsify Timesheets
In a shocking case of fiscal deception, Daniel J. Glauber, a former federal contract employee, has been sentenced to pay $70,646 in restitution and perform 360 hours of community service for falsifying timesheets at two separate federal agencies.
Glauber, 44, who currently resides in Fort Worth, Texas, pleaded guilty in November 2016 to a charge of making false statements in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia. The Honorable Richard J. Leon sentenced Glauber to five years of probation, which includes 90 days of GPS monitoring.
According to the government’s evidence, Glauber worked as a systems administrator at the Office of Personnel Management (OPM) under contract in April 2012. He was required to work a standard 40-hour work week on-site. Unbeknownst to OPM, Glauber was also hired as a subcontractor to work at the National Security Agency (NSA) on computer systems in May 2012. Similarly, his duties called for him to work a standard 40-hour work week and on-site.
From May through August 2012, Glauber worked at both OPM and NSA, but neither agency was aware of his dual employment. OPM’s Office of the Inspector General reviewed building access reports and confirmed that Glauber billed 323.75 hours for the time period ranging from May through August 2012 in which he was not actually present at his work site. He was paid $43,706 for these hours and was subsequently terminated by OPM.
NSA investigators later reviewed building records and uncovered a discrepancy of 269.5 hours in which Glauber had submitted timesheets for hours in which he did not work on-site. He was paid $26,940 for these hours.
In announcing the sentence, U.S. Attorney Channing D. Phillips, Norbert E. Vint, Acting Inspector General for the Office of Personnel Management, and Russell Decker, Acting Inspector General of the National Security Agency, commended the work of Special Agent Christopher Sulhoff, OPM, Office of the Inspector General, and the investigators who worked on the case from the National Security Agency, Office of the Inspector General.
The U.S. Attorney’s Office also acknowledged the efforts of Paralegal Specialists Kaitlyn Krueger, Christopher Toms, and Jessica Mundi, and former Assistant U.S. Attorney Teresa A. Howie and Assistant U.S. Attorney Adrienne C. Dedjinou, who prosecuted the case.
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Key Facts
- State: Washington DC
- Category: White Collar Crime
- Source: DOJ Press Release â†â€â€
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