By KIM MAIALETTI
Courier-Post Staff
CAMDEN
The city's Parking Authority received a subpoena from
the state Division of Criminal Justice Wednesday, less than
a week after two agency employees filed a civil lawsuit
that alleged financial mismanagement and bid rigging.
A division spokeswoman refused to comment on the nature
of the subpoena, saying only that the authority is being
investigated.
The authority's executive director, Anthony Scarduzio,
said he had heard about the subpoena from his receptionist,
but had not seen it.
Scarduzio is off from work this week because his niece
and his great-nephew died in an arson fire in Gloucester
Township Sunday.
"We'll give them whatever they want," Scarduzio said in
a phone interview Wednesday. "We're anxious to
cooperate."
Carmen Otero, chairwoman of the Parking Authority
Commission, said she was unaware a subpoena had been
issued.
The authority's lawyer, Carlos Morcate, did not return
phone messages.
The Parking Authority is an independent city agency that
oversees and operates two garages, 10 lots and 800
meters.
The five-member commission is appointed by the mayor and
city council.
On Friday, authority employees Thomas Del Rosario and
Joseph Bowen filed a lawsuit in Superior Court in Camden
claiming they suffered retaliation for blowing the whistle
on what they say is illegal activity within the agency.
Bowen, a property manager, was fired in August. Del
Rosario, a systems specialist, was suspended without pay
pending a hearing.
The far-reaching lawsuit includes accusations that
Scarduzio tipped off a favored vendor about another vendor'
s low bid in exchange for box seats to sporting events.
It also alleges Scarduzio looked the other way when
Bowen complained about another employee skimming money off
parking meter collections.
Scarduzio has described the suit as insider bickering
and said Bowen is in fact the one who tried to steer
business to his personal associates.
The Parking Authority had seemed to be back on track
after spending years under the state's watch because of
corruption and mismanagement.
In 1993, it went $1 million into debt, which forced the
state to take it over in September 1994. The state handed
over control to the city in 1997.