Press Release
University of Colorado Professor Pleads Guilty to Mail Fraud
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Colorado
DENVER – Oleg Viktorovich Vasilyev, age 50, of Boulder, Colorado, a professor in the Department of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Colorado in Boulder, pled guilty yesterday before U.S. District Judge William J. Martinez to mail fraud and aiding and abetting, U.S. Attorney Bob Troyer and Department of Energy Acting Inspector General April G. Stephenson announced. The defendant had been indicted by a federal grand jury in Denver on September 12, 2017. The sentencing hearing will be held on October 25, 2018, before Judge Martinez.
According to court documents, including the defendant’s plea agreement, in the summer of 2006, Vasilyev submitted an application to the Los Alamos National Laboratory (LANL) to obtain a federal contract worth $234,000.00. The defendant did this without the knowledge or approval of the University of Colorado’s Office of Contracts and Grants (OCG), which customarily would oversee such a contract. Over the next five to six years, Vasilyev caused invoices to be submitted directly to LANL purportedly to pay his salary, as well as the salary of a graduate student. LANL received the defendant’s invoices and forwarded monies to an auxiliary account held by the University of Colorado for Vasilyev. Vasilyev then obtained this money from the auxiliary account by submitting travel vouchers and other requests for reimbursement to the University of Colorado. Vasilyev later admitted that these requests for reimbursement included unallowable costs, such as more than $140,000 for international travel unconnected to any work for LANL. Other unallowable costs included dues, subscriptions, conference registration fees, and out of state travel. Vasilyev agreed to repay the University of Colorado a total of $185,879, but the total actual loss associated with Vasilyev’s fraud remains in dispute.
This case was investigated by the Department of Energy Office of Inspector General. The United States is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jeremy Sibert.
Contact
Jeff Dorschner, Spokesman, Public Affairs Specialist, 303-454-0243
Updated July 10, 2018
Topic
Financial Fraud
Component