Crane Co. Pays Government $7.6 Million to Settle False Claims Act Allegations
The Crane Co., a Stamford, Conn.-based manufacturer of engineered industrial products, has agreed to pay the United States $7.6 million to resolve allegations that the company violated the False Claims Act.
Article Tools
Advertisement
Most Popular News
The federal government alleges that the Crane Co. did not comply
with Defense Department Qualified Products List (QPL) regulations,
which require product suppliers to submit to government inspection
prior to becoming qualified and prior to being eligible to bid on
government contracts.
The government also alleges that the company violated the Berry
Amendment, which requires the Pentagon to give preference in
procurement to domestically produced, manufactured or homegrown
products. The government has alleged that some of Crane’s
valve products did not comply with the amendment’s
provisions, as well as the Buy America Act, in that some of the
components were not domestically produced.
Walter Klepacz, a former Crane Co. employee, originally filed a
suit against the company under the qui tam provisions of
the False Claims Act. The complaint alleged that Crane violated the
False Claims Act from as early as May 2003 by deliberately
disregarding the military’s specification
requirements.
According to the Justice Department, Crane allegedly delivered
valves to government prime contractors for use on Navy vessels and
the Coast Guard’s new National Security Cutters procured
under that agency’s Integrated Deepwater Improvement program.
The valves were supplied for installation on vessels used in
critical search and rescue and combat operations, including on
vessels used in support of ongoing operations in Iraq and
Afghanistan.
The Justice Department noted that the settlement resolves
Crane’s potential liability under the False Claims Act
arising from Klepacz's complaint and the government’s
additional allegations.
Peter Keisler, assistant attorney general for the Justice
Department’s Civil Division, asserted that the settlement
“will help ensure that the exacting quality standards called
for by the government endorsements will be met by contractors in
the future.”
Crane Denies Violating False Claims
Act
In a press release, Crane noted that the settlement agreement
pertains to “certain valves sold by the company's Crane
Valves North America unit that ultimately were delivered to the
U.S. Navy.” According to Crane, “[t]he company
unintentionally failed to provide prior notice to the Navy and
update the Navy's Qualified Products Listing to reflect a 2003
change in manufacturing location from California to
Texas.”
While Crane acknowledged the failure to notify the Navy and the
failure to update the QPL, the company said that it denies that the
omission violated the False Claims Act.
“Crane cooperated fully with this investigation, and with this settlement we resolved all the issues raised by the Department of Justice and the Navy,” Crane President and CEO Eric Fast said. “The failure to notify the Navy was unintentional and there was no misconduct by Crane Co. personnel. We felt it was best to put this matter behind us to avoid a costly legal proceeding.”
Want to use this article? Click here for options!
© 2012 Penton Media Inc.
Acceptable Use Policy blog comments powered by Disqus
Featured Resources
Advertisement
Featured Suppliers
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement
Online Resources
Free Webinar
Minimize Turf Equipment Downtime
Toro's web-based systems track your equipment maintenance schedules and parts purchases saving you time, money and making your job easier. Learn from the real-world experience of those using this system on a daily basis!
- Webinars
- Videos
- Whitepapers

What You're Saying