Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal announced that an Ocean County construction contractor pleaded guilty today to purposely not paying prevailing wages on a government contract valued over $75,000. As part of his criminal activity, the contractor falsified payroll records for the public contract to cover up the fact that he paid most of his employees only a fraction of the wages required under the Prevailing Wage Act, while not paying others at all. It is believed that many of the defendant’s employees were undocumented immigrants and he took advantage of their status.
Officials say Albert Chwedczuk, 45, of Toms River, N.J., pleaded guilty to an accusation charging him with second-degree false contract payment claims before Superior Court Judge Morris G. Smith in Camden County. Under the plea agreement, the state will recommend that Chwedczuk be sentenced to three years in state prison. He must pay a total of up to $200,407 in restitution to his workers. Sentencing for Chwedczuk is scheduled for Sept. 6.
“I am committed to using all available tools, including New Jersey’s strong criminal laws, to protect our workers, protect our immigrants, and protect the integrity of our public contracts,” said Attorney General Grewal. “When contractors receive taxpayer dollars for a public project, they promise to pay prevailing wages to employees for all their hard work. But this employer cheated his workers and hoarded public funds for his own enrichment. This case is a message to all employers that we will not tolerate contractors underpaying their workers and lying about it.”
“We are sending a loud and clear message to dishonest contractors that this type of crime does not pay,” said Director Veronica Allende of the Division of Criminal Justice. “We want unscrupulous employers to know that we will work closely with the Department of Labor and Workforce Development to investigate contract fraud and prevailing wage violations and hold bad actors accountable.”
Labor Commissioner Robert Asaro-Angelo said, “Our laws are clear: contractors are not guaranteed public financing of their projects, and if they want to receive public dollars they must pay their workers according to the letter of the law. This contractor’s actions were in complete defiance of our laws and principles, and that is why the state recommended a significant prison sentence. We are eager to work with our partners in the Attorney General’s Office to protect workers by ensuring unscrupulous contractors face significant penalties for crimes against New Jersey taxpayers.”
The state investigation revealed that Chwedczuk knowingly failed to pay his employees up to $200,407 in wages on a prevailing wage public contract in 2015 and 2016. As of 2014, Chwedczuk was legally barred from obtaining or performing work on public contracts due to his prior violations of the Prevailing Wage Act with respect to his businesses Ren Construction LLC and Real Construction LLC. Nevertheless, he used a new business entity he created, Bella Group LLC, to obtain a public subcontract worth $400,000 to provide masonry work for the Cooper Camden Student Housing project on South Broadway in Camden. Once Chwedczuk obtained the public subcontract using Bella Group LLC, he paid most of his employees only a fraction of the prevailing wages they were entitled to be paid, while not paying others at all.
Officials say to cover up his violations of the Prevailing Wage Act, he submitted certified payrolls containing false information to the general contractor on a weekly basis. In addition to producing false records, Chwedczuk instructed several employees to provide false information to an NJLWD investigator regarding the wages they were receiving.