HARTFORD, Conn.— When Peter Picone sold counterfeit electronic parts from China and Hong Kong for use in U.S. Navy submarines, the U.S. Justice Department says, he knew their failure could have “catastrophic” consequences. ADVERTISING HARTFORD, Conn.— When Peter Picone sold
HARTFORD, Conn.— When Peter Picone sold counterfeit electronic parts from China and Hong Kong for use in U.S. Navy submarines, the U.S. Justice Department says, he knew their failure could have “catastrophic” consequences.
He was sentenced last week to more than three years in prison in one of the first convictions under a new law that aims to help curb the growing problem of counterfeit parts entering the supply stream for U.S. military contractors.
It’s a problem that occupies federal investigators particularly in states like Connecticut with many defense contractors. In addition to the case involving integrated circuits for the submarine built at Groton-based Electric Boat, a man is awaiting sentencing for supplying unapproved computer chips for military helicopters built by Stratford-based Sikorsky Aircraft Corp.
The issue gained urgency with a 2011 investigation by the Senate Armed Services Committee that found 1,800 cases of suspected counterfeit parts in the defense supply chain over a two-year period, tracing many back to China.
A number of measures aimed at cleaning up the defense supply chain were adopted that year in a law that also created stiffer penalties for people caught in cases involving counterfeit military parts. Among other efforts since then, U.S. Justice Department officials say, there has been an increased focus on seeking out people responsible for shipping the imitation parts.
The only other person convicted so far under the new law is Hao Yang, of Bloomsburg, Pennsylvania, who was sentenced last year in federal court in Maryland to one year and nine months in prison for importing counterfeit goods, including electronics from China, and selling them as legitimate merchandise.
Picone, 42, of Methuen, Massachusetts, pleaded guilty in June 2014 to conspiracy to traffic in counterfeit military goods. According to prosecutors, he bought millions of dollars’ worth of counterfeit integrated circuits from suppliers in China and Hong Kong and resold them to customers abroad and in the U.S., including defense contractors he knew to be involved in construction of nuclear-powered submarines. He was sentenced last week in federal court in Hartford to three years and one month in prison.