• 68°

Government contractor faces two years in prison

A former government contractor will serve two years in prison for giving preferential treatment to defense contractors in exchange for money.
U.S. District Judge David Proctor also ordered Douglas Harry Ennis, 50, of Athens to serve two years of supervised release when he completes his term. He’s also required to pay $75,000 in restitution. Ennis’ prison sentence will begin Sept. 8.
Ennis was employed as deputy director of the Joint Center for Technology Integration located at the United States Army Space and Missile Defense Command at Redstone Arsenal in Huntsville from 1987-2008. Ennis was deputy director at JCTI while Michael Cantrell was the center’s director.
U.S. District Judge Sharon Lovelace Blackburn sentenced Cantrell in December 2009 to five years in prison for his role in the procurement fraud scheme that netted Cantrell $1.6 million in bribes.
She ordered Cantrell and other defendants in the case to pay $2.5 million in restitution to the government and entered a $685,060 forfeiture judgment against Cantrell. She also ordered Cantrell to pay $352,145 in back taxes to the Internal Revenue Service.
Ennis pleaded guilty in 2008 to a conspiracy during which he conspired with Cantrell and others to give preference to sub-contractors and vendors on contracts funded by the space and missile command. The sub-contractors and vendors gave money and gifts to Ennis and Cantrell. During the course of the conspiracy Ennis received approximately $70,000 from 2003 through 2004.
Ennis also pleaded guilty to two counts of making false statements on a financial disclosure form required by the Army. Ennis failed to report that he received $4,900 between Oct. 1, 2001, and Sept. 30, 2002.

Bob Jones High School

Fourth-graders absorb ‘The History of Madison’ from Cindi Sanderson

Harvest

VIP to host Charity Golf Tournament on Redstone Arsenal

Harvest

AUSA sponsors ‘Operation Eagle Claw’ about freeing hostages in Iran

Madison

MVP’s plant giveaway to celebrate Monarch mural outside Honest Coffee

Harvest

The Madison Village celebrates its 25th anniversary

Bob Jones High School

Optimist Club grants boost service options to youth

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones sweeps Sparkman to advance in playoffs

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 24, 2024

Madison

I-565 nighttime detours planned for Exit 10 work in Madison

Madison

Liberty Middle School student passes away after medical emergency on campus

Huntsville

Lexi Regensburger promotes HEALS for Girl Scout Gold

Harvest

Rocket City Novas, a new dance krewe, sashay into town

Harvest

Asbury Car & Bike Show to feature vehicles in pristine condition

Liberty Middle School

Liberty takes first-place finish in State MathCounts

Harvest

Fantasy Playhouse to launch ‘Space Monkeys!’ on May 9-12

Harvest

Defense Innovation Summit to explore tech in national security

Madison

‘Sounds of Summer’ concerts return to Home Place Park

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Mustang Mud Run- “Mud Head To Toe”

FRONT PAGE FEATURED

Mattress Sale To Aid James Clemens Football Program

Bob Jones High School

Madison Visionary Partners awards 5 Community Impact Grants

James Clemens High School

Students Neyan Sezhian, Erik Wu originate James Clemens Math Tournament

Bob Jones High School

Bob Jones bests rival James Clemens in Game 1 of weekend series

Digital Version

Digital version of The Madison Record – April 17, 2024

Events

Check out the 2024-25 edition of “Explore Huntsville-Madison”

x