Canadian Crane Inspector Wanted on Fraud Charges
March 8, 2011
– A
Fruitvale, British Columbia, man has been accused of posing as a commercial
crane inspector and providing falsified inspection certificates.
Paddy Gene Doherty
faces 49 fraud-related charges. The Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP) alleges he
forged certification after performing inspections on cranes, forklifts, garage
hoists, and other industrial equipment at approximately 27 businesses in 10
Kootenay, B.C., communities between January and June of 2009.
Doherty is accused of
defrauding businesses that paid him approximately $40,000CAN ($41,110 US) during
that time period. Doherty is also being charged on several counts of "uttering a
forged document" for allegedly forging a professional engineer's signature and
an engineering certification stamp.
Cpl. Dan Moskaluk, an RCMP
spokesman, said annual inspections are required on certain types of heavy
machinery and before a tower or crane can be erected. A crane inspector must be
certified by the Canadian General
Standards Board (CGSB), and then
must submit the inspection report to a professional engineer to review and
provide a stamped certificate.
In a written release,
Moskaluk said that checks showed that Doherty's CGSB certification had expired
on Dec. 31, 2008.
"More alarming than
the monetary loss to the businesses is the risk to the public and workers
safety, considering that in some of the cases, the re-inspections by a certified
inspector failed the equipment that had previously been approved by Doherty,"
said Moskaluk.
The investigation
began in May 2009 after a professional engineer lodged a complaint with police.
A warrant has been issued for Doherty's arrest, but police have failed to locate
him.