DOJ sentencing: Census supervisor gets 2 years for $790,000 kickbacks
The Justice Department says former Census Bureau supervisor Camille T. Jones was sentenced July 16, 2026, to two years for $790,000 in kickbacks.
The Justice Department says former U.S. Census Bureau supervisor Camille T. Jones was sentenced on July 16, 2026 to two years in federal prison plus one year of supervised release for a procurement-fraud conspiracy involving alleged $790,000 in kickbacks.
What changed on July 16, 2026
This July 16 sentencing is the next step after Jones entered a guilty plea on April 2, 2026. DOJ says the sentencingโimposed by a federal judgeโconverts the case from a plea-stage matter into a court-imposed penalty, followed by supervised monitoring.
DOJโs account: steering a Census employee assistant contract
According to DOJ and court documents described in the releases, Jones admitted that she steered a large employee assistant program contract to a prime contractor and a subcontractor, YMJ Consulting, which was owned by a relative of Jones. DOJ says Jones received kickbacks in exchange for steering the contract and related modifications; prosecutors described the contract as being worth โmillions of dollars.โ
Why prosecutors say the case involved obstruction
DOJ also says Jones tried to obstruct investigators by drafting a service agreement between YMJ Consulting and a mental health company she owned. In DOJโs account, both Jones and her relative signed the agreement in 2024 but backdated it to 2020 to make the kickbacks appear like legitimate consulting payments. Prosecutors say the relative then provided the document to law enforcement during the investigation.
Confidential procurement information and a related-pay allegation
DOJ further says Jones used her official position to share the Census Bureauโs confidential procurement information with another government contractor. DOJ says that contractor hired another one of Jonesโs relatives for a โminimal-workโ job, while Jones largely performed the workโyet the relative received $83,000, according to DOJโs description.
How the case was investigated and prosecuted
DOJ says the investigation involved the U.S. Department of Commerce Office of Inspector General (DOC-OIG). DOJโs Criminal Division Public Integrity Section and the U.S. Attorneyโs Office for the District of Maryland prosecuted the case.
Timeline to watch: co-defendant status
DOJ notes that on Aug. 14, 2025, Jonesโs relative, Yolanda Jones, pleaded guilty as well and was awaiting sentencing as of the July 16 announcements. Any later sentencing or related rulings could be a key follow-on development for readers tracking the procurement-integrity accountability chain.
What this means for taxpayers and federal contractors
For taxpayers and contractors, this case underscores how federal procurement disputes can quickly become criminal when prosecutors believe officials misused contracting influence and handled sensitive procurement information improperlyโespecially when prosecutors also allege efforts to shape the paper trail.
Sources
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