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NASA Disaster Averted: Feds Charge Florida Man With Mission Control Fraud

NASA

Enters Guilty Plea To Falsifying Documents, Pocketing Cash.

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A potential NASA launch disaster was averted. A Florida man now faces 20 years in federal prison.

BY: STAFF REPORT | BocaNewsNow.com

BOCA RATON, FL (BocaNewsNow.com) (Copyright © 2024 MetroDesk Media, LLC) — A Florida man will be sentenced in May for submitting fraudulent quality control documents stating that parts needed for Mission Control equipment met quality control standards that they did not. Steven Lukens of Port Charlotte now faces 20 years in a federal prison.

The United States Department of Justice provided this narrative to BocaNewsNow.com:

United States Attorney Roger B. Handberg announces that Steven Lukens (54, Port Charlotte) has pleaded guilty to wire fraud. Lukens faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in federal prison and has agreed to forfeit $271,024.35, which are traceable to proceeds of the offense. The sentencing hearing is scheduled for May 22, 2024.

According to the plea agreement, Lukens was the Chief Executive Officer of Gulf Atlantic International Supply, LLC (Gulf Atlantic). Gulf Atlantic entered into a sub-contract with Company-1 to procure materials needed for NASA’s space launch system at the Kennedy Space Center. However, Lukens submitted products that did not meet the quality standards and specifications required under the contract. Lukens then fraudulently led Company-1 to believe that the products met the required standards by submitting forged quality control documentation.

In total, Lukens submitted at least 191 fraudulent quality control documents to Company-1. These included fraudulent Certificates of Compliance, fraudulent Pressure Testing Certificates, and fraudulent test reports. Lukens’s materially false, fraudulent, and misleading representations caused Company-1 to pay Gulf Atlantic at least $271,024.35 for the parts it submitted.