|
April 3,
2008
|
SHORELINE
WASTE HAULER INVOLVED IN RACKETEERING CONSPIRACY SENTENCED TO ONE
YEAR IN FEDERAL PRISON
Kevin J. O'Connor,
United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, announced
that DENNIS BOZZUTO, 37, of Madison, Connecticut, was sentenced
today by Senior United States District Judge Ellen Bree Burns in
New Haven to 12 months of imprisonment, followed by three years
of supervised release, for conspiring to violate the federal Racketeer
Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). Judge Burns also
ordered BOZZUTO to pay a fine in the amount of $10,000. BOZZUTO
pleaded guilty to the offense on November 16, 2006.
According
to documents filed with the Court and statements made in court,
BOZZUTO, while he was an owner and operator of John's Refuse of
Northford, Connecticut, conspired with others to perpetuate a system,
commonly called the "property rights system." Carters
engaged in the property rights system would not service or compete
for other carters' customers. The property rights system essentially
destroys free enterprise, allowing the participating carters to
artificially inflate their prices and leaving waste removal customers
with no other options. In this scheme, which was directed at commercial
and municipal customers, participating carters agreed to quote inflated
prices to customers controlled by other carters. BOZZUTO admitted
that he participated in the affairs of the enterprise by agreeing
to respect the unwritten rules of the property rights system. Some
of BOZZUTO's co-conspirators enforced this system through extortion
and threats.
According
to documents filed with the Court and statements made in court,
BOZZUTO joined this conspiracy by placing artificially high bids
with customers "owned" by a co-conspirator, for the purpose
of furthering the property rights system. On two occasions, at the
request of a co-conspirator, BOZZUTO, through John's Refuse, submitted
inflated bids to"Customer X" and "Customer Y."
At that time, these two customers were being serviced by American
Disposal Services of Connecticut ("ADS"). In March 2005,
the co-conspirator instructed BOZZUTO to submit a bid of "one-four,"
or $14 per yard for trash removal services, to Customer X, which
was approximately twice the price that ADS had bid. BOZZUTO subsequently
faxed the inflated bid of $14 per yard to Customer X. Also in March
2005, the co-conspirator requested that BOZZUTO bid $14 per yard
to Customer Y, which, again, was approximately twice the price that
ADS was charging Customer Y at that time. BOZZUTO subsequently faxed
an inflated bid of approximately $10 per yard to Customer Y.
To date, 33
individuals and 10 businesses have been charged with various offenses
stemming from a long-term investigation into the waste-hauling industry
in Connecticut and eastern New York.
This matter
is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the
Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation Divison, the United
States Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General, and the
Connecticut State Police. The United States Marshals Service, the
Drug Enforcement Administration's Office of Professional Responsibility,
and the Connecticut Department of Correction have provided critical
assistance in the Investigation. Assistant United States Attorneys
Michael J. Gustafson, Raymond F. Miller, and Henry K. Kopel are
prosecuting this case.
CONTACT:
U.S. ATTORNEY'S OFFICE
Tom Carson
(203) 821-3722
thomas.carson@usdoj.gov
|