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Case

U.S. v. Victor Marquez

Overview

Victor M. Marquez, a Maryland resident and owner of two IT companies with significant government contracts, was charged in a four-count indictment with wire fraud conspiracy, wire fraud and major fraud against the United States for rigging bids and inflating the amount of money obtained from valuable IT contracts. Antwann C.K. Rawls, an employee of one of Marquez’s companies, and Scott A. Reefe, an IT sales executive, have been charged for their respective roles in the conspiracy. As alleged in the indictment, Marquez, Rawls, Reefe and their co-conspirators used their positions of trust to learn sensitive, confidential procurement information, including procurement budgets for large U.S. government IT contracts. The co-conspirators used that inside information to craft bids at artificially determined, non-competitive and non-independent prices, ensuring Marquez’s company would win the procurement. According to court documents, the co-conspirators shared their bids in advance of submitting them to the government, with one co-conspirator emailing that he would submit a “high price third bid.” Marquez and his co-conspirators submitted their collusive bids despite knowing the government sought independent, competitive bids for the valuable contracts, and despite Marquez’s certification of independent bidding.

Indictment (October 9, 2024)


Case Open Date
Incident Date
Case Name
United States v. Victor Marquez
Case Type
Criminal
Case Violation(s)
  • Major Fraud Act, execution/attempted execution of scheme to defraud the US in connection with government contracts of 1 million dollars or more
  • Consp. to Cmt Off against U.S. to Wit 1341 MF, 1343 WF and 1346 Honest Services Fraud
  • Wire Fraud
Market(s)
  • Computer systems design services
Case Document
Indictment   [PDF, ]
Updated December 17, 2024