Massachusetts man convicted in CDL bribery scam
Gary Cederquist, 59, of Stoughton, Massachusetts, was convicted on Friday by a federal jury. He had accepted bribes ranging from a new $10,000 driveway to a granite post and mailbox to cases of bottled water, The Boston Herald reported.
Among the dozens of charges on which Cederquist was convicted were extortion, honest services mail fraud and conspiracy to commit extortion. He was acquitted of nine related charges.
Cederquist, two other troopers and two civilians were accused in connection with the scheme, which was conducted from mid-2019 to early 2023, according to The Associated Press. Four of the five have pleaded guilty.
The officers passed dozens of drivers who had failed CDL skills tests or hadn't even taken the tests, letting them know they had passed through a text and the word 'golden.'
Cederquist called one applicant 'brain dead' and 'horrible' but passed him in exchange for a snowblower, the Herald reported.
'It is never a good day when a member of law enforcement is convicted of a crime, especially when it is a crime that compromises public safety,' U.S. Attorney Leah B. Foley said in a news release. 'Gary Cederquist chose bribery and extortion over his oath to protect the community which he was sworn to serve. His greed put the public at risk when he devised a scheme to issue commercial driver's licenses to applicants who had never taken a real test to operate heavy commercial vehicles on the roads and highways of Massachusetts. The U.S. Attorney's Office has the utmost respect for law enforcement, but we will not stand idly by if they violate the law.'
The AP noted that the CDL unit of the Massachusetts State Police, where Cederquist was in charge, has made several reforms in recent years, including:
Requiring that body cameras be worn during exams.
Conducting more frequent unannounced visits to the unit by supervisors.
Having examiners at training sites.
Developing new training procedures.
The pass rate on the CDL skills test in Massachusetts was 48% in 2019, 44% in 2020, 41% in 2021 and 41% in 2022, the Herald reported.
Related:
Feds charge Massachusetts state troopers in alleged CDL bribery scheme
The post Massachusetts man convicted in CDL bribery scam appeared first on FreightWaves.

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