LOS ANGELES
A man who ran a trucking company in Santa Fe Springs has pled guilty to dumping 11,000 gallons of waste water and soap into a tributary of the San Gabriel River in Santa Fe Springs, California, officials announced.
David Lee Flury, the 61 year old owner and operator of the Flury Industries, Inc., a waste-hauling company, pled guilty to a felony charge of water pollution today in federal court. Judge Stephen V. Wilson set Flury’s sentencing hearing for Aug. 15.
The San Gabriel River, one of the three most important waterways in Southern California, flows into the Pacific Ocean at Alamitos Bay between the cities of Long Beach and Seal Beach.
Flury admitted that the City of Santa Fe Springs spent nearly $750,000 cleaning up the soapy waste that he illegally dumped into Los Coyotes Creek, according to authorities.
“Water is a resource that we cannot afford to waste or pollute in drought-stricken Southern California,” said U.S. Attorney Eileen M. Decker. “This defendant’s crime caused significant harm to the public, taxpayers and the environment.”
Flury had previously been indicted with multiple felony counts, including water pollution, mail and wire fraud, witness tampering, destruction of evidence, and identity theft.
A federal grand jury indictment alleges that Flury used interstate wire communications and the mail system to defraud about 17 customers of over $350,000.
The indictment alleges that Flury told his customers that he would pick-up their various waste products and transport the waste for disposal at a facility licensed to receive and dispose of such waste products.
Instead, Flury allegedly and illegally dumped tens of thousands of gallons of waste products into the San Gabriel River and desert areas in Riverside County.
As a result of today’s conviction, Flury faces up to three years in prison.
This case was investigated by the City of Santa Fe Springs Fire Department, the City of Santa Fe Springs Police Department, the Los Angeles Department of Public Works, the California Department of Toxic Substances Control, and the United States Environmental Protection Agency – Criminal Investigations Division, according to officials.