United States Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania

10/04/2024 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 10/04/2024 16:16

Longtime Department of Veterans Affairs Supervising Engineer Convicted at Trial of Defrauding the Agency of Nearly $1 Million

Press Release

Longtime Department of Veterans Affairs Supervising Engineer Convicted at Trial of Defrauding the Agency of Nearly $1 Million

Friday, October 4, 2024
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, Eastern District of Pennsylvania
For Years, Defendant Directed Projects, Contracts to Shell Company Set Up With His Paramour

PHILADELPHIA - United States Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero announced that Ahmed Hassan, 70, of Collegeville, Pennsylvania, was convicted today by a federal jury on 22 counts of wire fraud arising from Hassan's misuse of his position as a federal employee of the Department of Veterans Affairs ("the VA") to defraud the agency of nearly $1 million over a seven-year period.

As proven at trial, Hassan was a trusted supervisory engineer at the Veterans Affairs Medical Center ("VAMC") in Philadelphia. In that position, Hassan was responsible for all mechanical and large HVAC systems at VAMC and was further charged with overseeing and implementing contracts in his area of responsibility.

From approximately 2013 through October 2017, Hassan schemed to defraud the VA by drafting and submitting for payment, false invoices of a company called HT Mechanical. Unbeknownst to VAMC management, and in violation of Hassan's duties to the VA, HT Mechanical was nothing but a shell that Hassan had secretly set up with his paramour, Lynn Hanrahan[1] - a social worker with no knowledge of, or expertise in, HVAC or mechanical systems - in order to carry out the scheme.

For years, the defendant made up fake work, drafted false invoices on HT Mechanical letterhead, submitted them for payment to the VA under the VA purchase card program and lied to the VA, claiming that the work had been done, when the so-called jobs did not exist. and no work was done. After the VA made payment to HT Mechanical on the defendant's say so, Hanrahan returned money to the defendant, either by check or by giving the defendant envelopes of cash.

Hassan is scheduled to be sentenced on January 15, 2025. He faces a maximum possible sentence of up to 20 years in prison for each count on which he was convicted.

"For the better part of a decade, for his own benefit, Ahmed Hassan siphoned almost a million dollars from Philadelphia's VA Medical Center," said U.S. Attorney Romero. "In misusing his position to do so, he betrayed his colleagues, U.S. taxpayers, and, most egregiously, the veterans the VA serves. My office and our partners will bring to justice anyone padding their pockets like this at the federal government's expense."

The case was investigated by Department of Veterans Affairs Office of Inspector General and the FBI and is being prosecuted by Special Assistant United States Attorney Megan Curran and Assistant United States Attorney Mary Crawley.

[1] Hanrahan was charged in a related scheme, pleaded guilty, and is awaiting sentencing.

Contact

[email protected]
215-861-8300

Updated October 4, 2024
Topic
Financial Fraud