Probe launched into strip club ‘entertainment,’ gifts to Amtrak staff

A criminal investigation has been launched in connection to gifts accepted by two Amtrak employees — including drinks and “entertainment” at a strip club — from a construction contractor who received a $58 million contract from the company, The Post has learned.

The probe was confirmed by Amtrak’s Office of Inspector General in response to a records request about the gifts accepted by an Amtrak management official and an inspector.

“Any responsive records are currently part of an open and pending criminal investigation,” an attorney for the Amtrak watchdog wrote in denying The Post access to the documents.

“Premature release could afford a virtual roadmap through the government’s evidence … which would provide critical insights into its legal thinking and strategy and could jeopardize the proceedings by more fully revealing the scope and nature of the government’s case,” the lawyer added.

Amtrak memo
Amtrak’s Office of Inspector General filed a public memo about the employees in March.
Amtrak
Close up of an 
Amtrak train.
The inspector accepted gifts of a furnace for his church, a suit, and a pair of shoes from the contractor.
Alamy Stock Photo

In a publicly filed memo in March, Amtrak’s OIG said an unnamed Amtrak inspector and management official were fired earlier this year for accepting the gifts from the contractor.

Woman dancing on a pole.
The management official received gifts of “drinks and entertainment at a gentleman’s club” from the contractor.
Alamy Stock Photo

“The management official received gifts from the contractor, including
three trips to Philadelphia, and drinks and entertainment at a gentleman’s club,” the memo states.

The inspector accepted gifts, including a furnace for his church, a suit, and a pair of shoes, from the construction official, who received a $58 million contract from Amtrak, it adds.

Amtrak, a for-profit rail company, receives federal and local subsidies and is subject to oversight by its inspector general.

The OIG has investigative and audit resources designed, in part, to sniff out fraud, waste and abuse in the company, according to its website.

A spokesperson for Amtrak and a DOJ official did not immediately respond to request for comment.

A rep for the US Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia said she could not confirm or deny the existence of an investigation.

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