In addition to facing Congressional scrutiny this week for planning an $800,000 Las Vegas conference, a senior General Services Administration executive may soon be charged with theft, as well.
Jeffrey Neely, the organizer who has been asked to testify at multiple hearings this week for his role in planning the 2010 biennial GSA Public Buildings Services Western Regions conference, also took various electronics from a GSA office in San Francisco for his personal use, government officials told The Washington Post Friday. The accusations stem from evidence that Brian Miller, GSAâs inspector general, turned over to Justice Department prosecutors, according to the Post.
Miller asked Justice to consider filing criminal charges against Neely for theft, contracting improprieties and other violations, the Post reported. Neither Neelyâs attorney nor Justice provided comment.
The stolen items allegedly included an iPod, speakers, a GPS tracking system, a camera and a Sony e-reader. An earlier inspector generalâs report, as relayed by Federal Times, had declared 40 iPods, intended to be prizes for the agencyâs âHats Offâ employee rewards program, stolen from the Philip Burton Federal Building in San Francisco.
Neely will assert his right to remain silent at this weekâs hearings, the Associated Press reported Friday.

No comments:
Post a Comment