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Employees in Nevada DMV computer scandal paid $100K while on leave

Customers wait in line the DMV at Sahara office on Friday, May 10, 2019, in Las Vegas. (Bizuaye ...

Two Department of Motor Vehicles staffers were paid more than $100,000 each while on administrative leave around the time a bribery scandal involving the DMV’s computer system broke.

A 2017 lawsuit alleges that those information technology staffers sabotaged the agency’s computer modernization in an attempt to obtain bribes.

But state officials declined to say why IT employees Manivannan Karuppuswamy and Anand Vijayaraghavan were put on leave — and what the internal investigation found.

“The Department has provided the records on this request as required by law,” DMV spokesman Kevin Malone wrote in an email exchange. “We decline to answer any further questions on this matter.”

The agency is looking for a new contractor to modernize its computers, and Karuppuswamy and Vijayaraghavan continue to work on the project, records show.

The agency squandered more than $26 million in vehicle registration fees in the past four years on the failed modernization attempt.

During the 2019 legislative session, lawmakers extended the fee for two additional years to pay for a new modernization plan.

Richard Karpel, executive director of the Nevada Press Association, said the public has a right to know what happened in this high-profile case.

“The DMV was accused of soliciting bribes,” he said. “One would think the agency would be interested in releasing records tending to show the accusation was without merit. The fact that they’re willing to withhold documents in apparent violation of the law doesn’t inspire confidence.”

State law requires that all government records be public unless there is a specific exemption in state law, but the DMV cited the state administrative code as the reason for withholding details of the administrative leave and the investigation into the two employees. The Review-Journal disputed that the administrative code can exempt records from the public records law.

Corruption allegation

On Feb. 6, 2017, Tech Mahindra executive Brian Coffey was removed from the DMV modernization project because he had blocked bribes to Karuppuswamy and Vijayaraghavan, a lawsuit Coffey filed in 2017 states. Coffey then reported the bribe scheme to the company’s ombudsman in late March or April.

Karuppuswamy was placed on administrative leave on March 28, 2017, and Vijayaraghavan joined him less than two weeks later, records obtained under state public records laws show. The paid leave lasted until July 2018, records show.

Karuppuswamy, an IT manager 2, was paid $103,581.03 during the leave, and Vijayaraghavan, a master IT professional 2, received $130,000.25, DMV records show.

Coffey’s superiors directed him to pay at least $400,000 and as much as $4 million in bribes to the two men, the lawsuit claimed.

The termination of the $75 million Tech Mahindra contract came after a critical audit and a scathing consultant’s report that called the DMV’s modernization attempt “one of the most troubled public sector modernization efforts” the contractor had ever seen.

Fee extension

The Review-Journal reported in May that former DMV director Troy Dillard joined the company just as the contract was being awarded to Tech Mahindra in 2016. Coffey’s lawsuit states that Dillard, who did not respond to requests for comment, was hired at Tech Mahindra in exchange for getting the company the contract.

“Dillard as director of the Nevada DMV had helped Tech Mahindra win the Contract and that now Tech Mahindra was hiring him,” the lawsuit states.

When Coffey blocked the bribe payments, Karuppuswamy and Vijayaraghavan rejected Tech Mahindra’s programming for no good reason, Coffey’s lawsuit states. The lawsuit, filed in September 2017 and unsealed at the Review-Journal’s request in July 2019, was settled in 2018 for an undisclosed amount.

The modernization was funded by a $1 fee on all DMV transactions, which lawmakers extended until June 2022. Republican lawmakers filed a suit arguing that the DMV fee extensions violate the constitution because the bill was not approved by a supermajority vote in the Legislature.

Tech Mahindra has maintained that all the corruption claims were investigated and determined to be unfounded. Through a spokesman, it declined to comment on the administrative leave. Coffey, Karuppuswamy and Vijayaraghavan did not return calls and emails seeking comment.

Contact Arthur Kane at akane@reviewjournal.com. Follow @ArthurMKane on Twitter. Kane is a member of the Review-Journal’s investigative team, focusing on reporting that holds leaders and agencies accountable and exposes wrongdoing. Support our journalism.

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