Port of Seattle on the Rocks

McKay’s findings could add fuel to the Justice Department’s investigation.

The special investigation team probing the spending at the Port of Seattle has turned up at least 10 acts of fraud but “did not identify any embezzlement or [deal-making for] personal gain.” Nonetheless, last week’s findings, released by team leader and former U.S. Attorney Mike McKay, clearly indicate there’s fodder there for McKay’s former employer, the U.S. Dept. of Justice, which is already probing potential payoffs and kickbacks at the Port.

Not identifying personal gain doesn’t mean it didn’t happen—McKay was unable to subpoena records, he said, and could not get some people to talk. But the report clearly points federal investigators toward one questionable deal, which involves construction of the new third runway at Sea-Tac. An unnamed Port employee handed secret bid specs to contracting conglomerate TTI, which later won the project and scored what McKay calls an “astonishing” 30 percent profit on the $125 million deal.

Did that employee leak those documents out of the goodness of his heart? And did TTI—a partnership of the Scarsella Brothers, Gary Merlino Construction, and Tri-State Construction—merely send him a thank-you note? These questions are sure to be asked by the feds, who began following the money after a state audit first revealed corrupt Port practices last year.

The coziness of the Port under then-CEO Mic Dinsmore is also on display in the new report. When Dinsmore sought a congressional internship for his daughter in D.C., he simply called McBee Strategic Consulting, a D.C. lobbying firm that worked for the Port, and the personal favor (a job in Rep. Norm Dicks’ office) was quickly granted.

Among McBee’s lobbyists then was former Port aviation director Gina Marie Lindsey. After she went to McBee, the firm received $910,000 worth of no-bid lobbying contracts with the Port of Seattle over five years.