NASHVILLE: When federal agents descended on the Knoxville
headquarters of Pilot Flying J on April 15, it was the first inkling the
public and company executives had of an FBI and Internal Revenue
Service investigation that began nearly two years ago.
After the
country’s largest diesel retailer sought to downplay the probe, federal
officials took the unusual step of unsealing an affidavit that helped
authorize the raid before any charges have been filed. The sworn
statement recounts internal Pilot conversations that led investigators
to conclude there was a widespread scheme to defraud trucking company
customers in order to boost company profits and pad sales commissions.
The
privately held company with $31 billion in annual revenues is run by
CEO Jimmy Haslam, who also owns the NFL’s Cleveland Browns. The Haslam
family, including brother Tennessee Gov. Bill Haslam, holds a majority
stake.
NFL spokesman Greg Aiello has said the league had no
plans to ask Haslam to relinquish operational control of the Browns
during the investigation. There is obviously a chance the league could
change its stance as the legal process evolves.
The
investigation started May 4, 2011, when the FBI was contacted by someone
who said he had been told by a Pilot regional sales manager that
customers were being cheated out of contractually set price rebates.
The
affidavit gave no details about whether the person, identified in the
document only as confidential source No. 1, was a colleague, customer or
how they were connected to Pilot.
The source agreed to cooperate
with the FBI, and the next month began secretly recording conversations
with the sales manager, who outlined how two top sales officials at
Pilot would withhold portions of money due to customers in a process
most often referred to as “manual rebates.”
The recorded conversations also pointed agents to a former regional sales manager, Cathy Giesick.
Federal
agents contacted both the sales manager and Giesick in the first week
of October 2012. Both agreed to cooperate and confirmed that their
supervisors reduced rebates due to customers.
Giesick and the current sales manager, identified as source No. 2, were granted immunity for their cooperation.
Giesick
told agents she left Pilot in part because of her discomfort with the
rebate-lowering scheme. She provided an example, saying if a customer
was due a $10,000 rebate, her supervisor, national sales director Brian
Mosher, would cut that payment to about $7,500.
No charges have
been filed in the case. While Jimmy Haslam has denied any wrongdoing, he
has suspended several members of the sales team, but has declined to
identify exactly who has been suspended. The company has not made any of
its other workers available and Haslam has made statements, but not
taken questions from the media.
Haslam has called for the review of all 3,330 trucking customer contracts and making all billing and payments electronic.
Smaller accounts targeted
Giesick
said the fraud “was typically directed at smaller accounts where the
customer would not have the capability to catch the reduction,”
according to the affidavit.
If a customer complained, Giesick said Mosher told her “blame the error on a computer glitch.”
Meanwhile,
source No. 2 began secretly recording conversations with other
colleagues on Pilot’s sales team. On Oct. 17, Omro, Wis.-based sales
manager Rob Yurnovich was recorded as saying the rebate reductions can
become difficult to manage.
“I wouldn’t say it’s unethical. I’m
just uncomfortable with it,” Yurnovich said on the recording. “And the
fact that when you get caught you have to do so much back pedaling, you
lose a ton of credibility whether you can cover it with a story or not.”
Sales directors talk
Later
that month, source No. 2 recorded a regional sales directors meeting at
the Rockwood, Tenn., lake house of John “Stick” Freeman, Pilot’s vice
president of sales.
Freeman told younger colleagues that they should carefully target customers.
“Some of ’em don’t know what a spreadsheet is. I’m not kiddin’,” Freeman said. “So, again, my point is this: Know your customer.
“If
the guy’s sophisticated and he truly has gone out and gotten deals from
the other competitors and he’s gettin’ daily prices from us, don’t jack
with his discounts, ’cause he’s gonna know, OK?”
Freeman regaled
his colleagues with a story of being caught withholding $1 million in
rebates due to client Western Express. Freeman said Pilot had to pay up
that amount but laughed because the company still came out $6 million
ahead.
Source No. 2 later asked Freeman what Jimmy Haslam’s reaction had been.
“He knew it all along. Loved it,” Freeman said. “We were makin’ $450,000 a month on him — why wouldn’t he love it?”
“Did it for five years, cost us a million bucks,” he said. “I mean, we made $6 million on the guy, cost us a million bucks.”
Although
the affidavit doesn’t include any recordings of conversations with
Haslam, Special Agent Robert H. Root said the transcripts don’t cover
every recording.
Mixed reaction
At the training session, Mosher cautioned his colleagues to be careful about how they described what was happening with rebates.
The instructions from the senior sales staff drew differing reactions from more junior staff.
“Welcome
to the gray side,” Holly Radford, a regional account representative
based at Pilot headquarters, said to laughter from her colleagues.
Jason Holland, a sales manager based in Nashville, followed up with, “I’ll be honest, I’m struggling with the gray part.”
Mosher
responded that keeping the rebate steady will avoid confusion among
customers when prices — and margins — spike or fall. A customer
accustomed to receiving a $25,000 rebate will raise questions when it
suddenly surges to $75,000 and then back to $15,000, he said.
“So
my answer is, why put him in that situation, where he needs to even
ask?” Mosher said with a laugh. “Don’t ever pay him the 75!”
By
April 9, source No. 2 had told the FBI that the Pilot Flying J general
counsel, Kristen Seabrook, was requiring all information needed to
approve rebates be submitted by April 12, with the next round of
payments scheduled to be sent April 15.
That’s the day the FBI and
IRS agents raided Pilot’s corporate headquarters, the building housing
its computer servers and the homes of sales team members Mosher in
Bettendorf, Iowa, Arnie Ralenkotter in Hebron, Ky., and Nashville-based
sales director Kevin Hanscomb.
The three men did not return telephone calls from the Associated Press.
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