Huntington man faces up to 10 years
A Huntington Beach businessman who brokered parts for commercial and
military airplanes is facing up to 10 years in jail for selling
unapproved aircraft parts to the United States government.
Michael Joseph Murphy, 34, was convicted Feb. 22 of signing his
name as a government agent on several documents, Assistant U.S. Atty.
Richard Cutler said.
Murphy, owner of Primetech, made a false claim to the United
States and submitted a false statement to the Department of Defense
when he signed off as a government agent, stating the aircraft parts
were certified and inspected when in fact they were not, said the
U.S. Attorney’s office.
In a $100,000 deal between Primetech and the government, Murphy
was supposed to deliver parts for the Air Force’s C-5 transport plane
from a pre-approved source, Cutler said.
Between May and July 2003, Murphy obtained parts from an
unapproved source, delivered the parts to the Air Force and billed
the government for the agreed fee, Cutler said. The contract required
that the parts be inspected by a government representative, but
Murphy shipped the parts before they could be inspected.
When the Department of Defense contacted Murphy to advise him that
the parts must be inspected, Murphy signed the inspection form
himself and returned it to the government. The $100,000 fee was paid
to Primetech and the company has not yet returned the money, Cutler
said.
Murphy is free on $250,000 bail pending sentencing May 23, Cutler
said. Murphy could face up to 10 years in a federal prison and
$500,000 in fines, Cutler said.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.