UPS to pay $5.3 million to resolve U.S. international mail probe
The Justice Department announced that United Parcel Service
Inc. (UPS) has agreed to pay approximately $5.3 million to resolve its
potential liability under the False Claims Act for falsely reporting
information about the transfer of U.S. mail to foreign posts or other intended
recipients under contracts with the U.S. Postal Service (USPS). UPS is an
international package delivery company incorporated in Delaware with
headquarters in Atlanta, Georgia.
USPS contracted with UPS to pick up U.S. mail at six
locations in the United States and at various Department of Defense and State
Department locations abroad, and then deliver that mail to numerous
international and domestic destinations. To obtain payment under the contracts,
UPS was required to submit electronic scans to USPS reporting the time the mail
was delivered at the identified destinations. The contracts specified penalties
for mail that was delivered late or to the wrong location. The settlement
resolves allegations that scans submitted by UPS falsely reported the time and
fact that it transferred possession of the mail.
“Companies doing business with the government must meet
their contractual obligations,” said Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney
General Brian M. Boynton, head of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “The
Department of Justice will pursue those who knowingly fail to live up to their
bargain and falsely bill the government for goods or services that they did not
provide.”
“The USPS contracts with commercial airlines for the
safeguarding and timely delivery of U.S. mail to foreign posts, including the
mail sent to our soldiers deployed to foreign operating bases,” said Executive
Special Agent in Charge Ken Cleevely of the USPS Office of Inspector General.
“The Office of Inspector General supports USPS by aggressively investigating
allegations of contractual non-compliance within the mail delivery process,
including the falsification of delivery information. Our special agents worked
hand-in-hand with the Department of Justice to help ensure a reasonable
resolution and we applaud the exceptional work done by the investigative and
legal teams.”
This is the fifth civil settlement involving air carrier
liability for false delivery scans under the USPS International Commercial Air
Contracts, and collectively the United States has recovered more than $70
million as a result of its investigation of such misconduct.
The resolution obtained in this matter was the result of a
coordinated effort between the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch,
Fraud Section, with substantial assistance from the USPS Office of the
Inspector General and the USPS Office of General Counsel. Senior Trial Counsel
Don Williamson of the Civil Division’s Commercial Litigation Branch, Fraud
Section, represented the government in the civil case.
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