LOS ANGELES
Officials stated that a former FBI special agent was sentenced Monday to six years in federal prison for conspiring to accept at least $150,000 in cash bribes and other items of value.
The bribes were for providing sensitive law enforcement information to a corrupt attorney with ties to Armenian organized crime, according to officials.
Babak Broumand, 56, of Lafayette, California, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge R. Gary Klausner.
In addition to the prison sentence, Judge Klausner ordered Broumand to pay a $30,000 fine and to forfeit $132,309 linked to his criminal activity.
“Mr. Broumand took an oath of office, swearing to defend the laws of the United States and to uphold the high standards of the FBI. He violated this solemn promise and now he will face the consequences of his choice,” said United States Attorney Martin Estrada.
“Today’s sentencing of Mr. Broumand, a former FBI agent who abandoned his pledge to serve the American people in exchange for a lavish lifestyle, is gratifying and reaffirms the FBI’s commitment to weeding out corruption of public officials, including those from within.” said Donald Alway, the Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office.
A federal jury in October 2022 found Broumand guilty of one count of conspiracy, two counts of bribery of a public official, and one count of monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity.
The jury found Broumand not guilty of one count of bribery of a public official and one count of monetary transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity.
Broumand has been in federal custody since the jury returned the guilty verdict against him after an 11-day trial.
Broumand was a Bay Area resident and served as an FBI special agent from January 1999 until shortly after search warrants were served on his home and businesses in 2018.
He was responsible for national security investigations and was assigned to the FBI Field Office in San Francisco.
From January 2015 to December 2018, Broumand accepted cash, checks, private jet flights, a Ducati motorcycle, hotel stays, escorts, meals, and other items of value from an organized crime-linked attorney – identified in court papers as “E.S.,” and each man acted to conceal the true nature of their corrupt relationship, according to officials.
In return for the bribe payments and other items of value, Broumand conducted law enforcement database inquiries and used those inquiries to help E.S. and his associates avoid prosecution and law enforcement monitoring.
Specifically, Broumand informed E.S. whether a particular person or entity was under criminal investigation by stating that E.S. should “stay away” from that person or that they were “OK.”
To conceal the nature of their corrupt relationship, Broumand made it falsely appear that E.S. was working as an FBI source.
Broumand wrote false reports after the fact to make it appear that he conducted legitimate law enforcement database inquiries.
In exchange for the illegal inquiries, E.S. paid Broumand at least $150,000 in cash and check bribes, including a Ducati motorcycle and accessories valued at more than $36,000.
The bribes were deposited into the accounts for Love Bugs LLC, a Lafayette-based lice-removal hair salon business that Broumand and his wife started in 2007.
Soon after the bribery scheme began, E.S. asked Broumand to query the FBI database for Levon Termendzhyan, an Armenian organized crime figure for whom E.S. had worked.
According to court documents, the database search “rang all the bells” and revealed an FBI investigation in Los Angeles, which noted that Broumand accessed the FBI case file on Termendzhyan repeatedly in January 2015.
Broumand also allegedly accessed the Termendzhyan FBI case file in May 2016. Termendzhyan, a.k.a. “Lev Aslan Dermen,” was found guilty in March 2020 in federal court in Utah on criminal charges related to a $1 billion renewable fuel tax credit fraud scheme.
His sentencing hearing in Utah is scheduled for April 6.
In December 2015, at E.S.’s request, Broumand searched a confidential FBI database for information about Sam Sarkis Solakyan, a medical imaging company CEO, and later warned E.S. to “stay away” from Solakyan, who was “trouble,” meaning that
Solakyan was under law enforcement investigation.
Solakyan eventually was charged in San Diego federal court, tried, convicted, and sentenced to five years in federal prison for running a scheme that submitted more than $250 million in fraudulent claims through California’s workers’ compensation system.
In May 2016, Broumand interfered with an FBI investigation into Felix Cisneros Jr., a corrupt special agent with Homeland Security Investigations who also had ties to Termendzhyan.
Cisneros was convicted at trial in two different cases.
The first trial, in 2018, resulted from Cisneros’s corrupt acts for Termendzhyan. The second trial, in April 2022, resulted from Cisneros’s corrupt acts, for E.S. Cisneros was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison.
The FBI, the U.S. Department of Justice’s Office of the Inspector General, and IRS Criminal Investigation investigated this matter.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael J. Morse of the Public Corruption and Civil Rights Section, Juan M. Rodriguez of the Environmental and Community Safety Crimes Section, and Tara B. Vavere of the Asset Forfeiture and Recovery Section prosecuted this case.