HARTFORD, Conn. — A former top official in Connecticut Gov. Ned Lamont's budget office allegedly extorted private contractors into paying him thousands of dollars in bribes as he oversaw large blocks of state money for school construction projects, federal authorities said Thursday.
Konstantinos ''Kosta'' Diamantis, a former state representative and a lawyer, appeared in federal court in Hartford in the afternoon after being arrested hours earlier at his home. He pleaded not guilty to 22 charges, including extortion, bribery, conspiracy and false statement charges, and he was released on $500,000 bail. Diamantis has previously denied any wrongdoing.
U.S. Attorney Vanessa Roberts Avery and officials with the FBI and IRS allege Diamantis used his position as director of the state's Office of School Construction Grants and Review to demand and ultimately receive thousands of dollars in bribes from contractors from 2018 to 2021. It was in exchange for helping the companies obtain and maintain contracts for work on multimillion-dollar, state-funded school construction projects, officials said.
Federal authorities on Thursday also announced that three executives with two private contractors — a masonry business and a construction management firm — pleaded guilty earlier in the week to conspiring to bribe Diamantis.
''Constructing and renovating schools is an important, and very expensive, endeavor for our state and municipalities, and corruption within a program that manages and funds them adds cost, seriously erodes trust in government, and raises questions about work quality and the potential harms to students and educators in the classroom,'' Avery said in a statement.
Diamantis and his lawyer, Vincent Provenzano, declined to comment on the allegations while leaving the courthouse. Diamantis has previously said he expected to be cleared of any wrongdoing.
''We just got the indictment,'' Provenzano said.
In the 35-page indictment released Thursday, federal investigators highlighted electronic messages to show Diamantis pressured contractors to provide him with money after helping them secure state contracts. After discussing school projects in one message with Salvatore Monarca and John Duffy, the president and vice president, respectively, of Acranom Masonry Inc. in Middlefield, Diamantis wrote that he expected a percentage of the total contract price.