Two Florida men were charged federally after prosecutors alleged they bribed a U.S. Army official with about $1.25 million over five years to steer contracts tied to the Hawaii-Pacific Innovation Campus.
Leonard Pick, 62, of Palm Beach Shores, and Brian Kent, 59, of Tampa, were each charged with conspiracy to commit bribery and major fraud against the federal government, bribery, major fraud against the federal government, and wire fraud. Kent also faces a second major fraud count.
Pick was arrested in Virginia and Kent in Florida on May 20. They are scheduled to be arraigned June 3 in U.S. District Court in Honolulu.
According to a May 14 indictment, Pick and Kent conspired from January 2021 to October 2022 to pay a civilian U.S. Army Pacific employee in exchange for contracts for their company and subcontracting work from prime contractors.
Court records identified the alleged co-conspirator as an Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance Capabilities Officer employed by U.S. Army Pacific from 2016 to 2022 and the government’s primary representative for the innovation center.
At the time, Pick was chief strategy officer and Kent was executive vice president of an Indiana defense contractor. Kent also founded North Carolina-based K3 Enterprises Inc. with his wife.
Prosecutors alleged the men arranged to pay the Army employee $1.25 million over five years. Their company later received a $3 million contract, and prosecutors said the men paid the official $55,000 from funds set aside for bribes. On Feb. 6, 2021, the three allegedly discussed the plan in a virtual meeting. The next day, Kent allegedly emailed the official a budget spreadsheet titled “Plan Ahead v2” showing a $250,000 annual salary built into the subcontract.
Prosecutors said the men then worked with employees of a Maryland-based defense nonprofit to hire the official and route salary payments through the nonprofit. From April 16 to Sept. 16, 2021, the official allegedly received biweekly checks of $2,706 deposited into a Honolulu bank account.
From September 2020 to October 2022, Kent also allegedly inflated contract costs to include about $680,000 in payments to his consulting business, according to court records.
“These indictments result from ongoing federal investigations into fraud and collusion in the defense contracting industry in Hawaii,” the Justice Department said.
Pick’s attorney, William A. Harrison, said, “To date, we have not been presented with, nor have we seen, any evidence of wrongdoing by Mr. Pick.” Kent’s lawyer, William L. Shipley, declined comment.