Illustration of former VA executive John Windom in court, surrounded by symbols of concealed gifts like cash, casino chips, and gift cards from contractors.
Illustration of former VA executive John Windom in court, surrounded by symbols of concealed gifts like cash, casino chips, and gift cards from contractors.
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Former VA electronic health records modernization leader charged with hiding gifts and conflicts, DOJ says

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Federal prosecutors in Washington have charged John Windom, 64, a former Department of Veterans Affairs senior executive who previously led the agency’s electronic health records modernization office, with concealing gifts and making false statements tied to benefits he allegedly received from contractors working on the VA project. Windom is accused of failing to disclose thousands of dollars in cash, casino chips, gift cards and other items between 2017 and 2021; his initial court appearance is scheduled for April 14, the Justice Department said.

John Windom, a retired U.S. Navy officer and former member of the VA’s Senior Executive Service, previously served as executive director of the VA’s Office of Electronic Health Record Modernization, the unit responsible for the agency’s long-running effort to replace its legacy health-records system with a commercial platform shared with the Department of Defense.

According to a three-count federal indictment announced by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia, Windom is charged with concealment of material facts and with making false statements related to required ethics disclosures. Prosecutors allege that while he was leading the VA’s electronic health record modernization effort, he concealed from ethics officials and the public that he was accepting—and at times demanding—valuable benefits from contractors and subcontractors involved with the program.

The Justice Department said the alleged gifts and benefits included $8,200 in Louis Vuitton gift cards, $3,800 in casino chips, $2,000 in cash, a $631 HEPA air filter and concert tickets. The government alleges the benefits were tied to interactions with contractors working on the VA modernization effort during the 2017–2021 period.

The VA’s health-records overhaul has been under scrutiny for years. The underlying contract for the new electronic health record system was initially awarded to Cerner for up to about $10 billion over 10 years, and the broader VA modernization effort has been described by federal officials as a roughly $16 billion acquisition and deployment project. VA deployments began in 2020 but were paused in 2023 after concerns raised by users and investigators.

VA officials have since described plans to restart and accelerate deployments in 2026, according to the agency and a recent Government Accountability Office review.

In announcing the case, U.S. Attorney Jeanine Pirro said the government alleges Windom exploited his senior role for personal gain and failed to disclose gifts and financial relationships that created conflicts of interest affecting the department.

Some details that have circulated in commentary about a “Power Group,” alleged threats to participants, and specific claims about a company diversity contract tied to a romantic partner are not included in the Justice Department’s public release announcing the charges and could not be independently confirmed from the materials reviewed for this report.

Hva folk sier

Discussions on X focus on the DOJ charges against former VA executive John Windom for concealing gifts including cash, casino chips, and Louis Vuitton items from contractors on the EHR modernization project. Users express outrage over corruption and waste in veterans' healthcare, with some highlighting DEI pressures and linking to broader government scandals. Sentiments are predominantly negative, with neutral reporting from military news outlets and skeptical political takes.

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