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Man Behind Cleanup In NYC Ebola Case Accused Of Misrepresenting Himself

NEW YORK (CBSNewYork/CBS News) -- When Dr. Craig Spencer became the first person to be diagnosed with the Ebola virus in New York City last month, the city turned to one man to clean up the contaminated waste – Sal Pane.

But on Friday, Pane was being accused of using good looks and charm to win business and attention that he did not earn.

As CBS News' Vinita Nair reported, Pane and his company seemed like the perfect candidates to clean up after Dr. Spencer was taken to Bellevue Hospital Center and placed in isolation. The company had nearly 20 years of dealing with hazardous situations.

"We are the most highly-trained company out there that's done this," Pane said on Al Jazeera America. "We've done everything from Anthrax, from MRSA, to Ebola."

On TV and on the radio, Pane was a pro at promoting his company.

"For 20-plus years, I mean we have cleaned up some of the most remarkable situations that this country has seen," Pane said on "The Tony Conley Morning Show" radio program.

Pane was the face for cleaning up Ebola.

"Anywhere that seemed to be willing to give him oxygen, he was there, talking up his experience and claiming that he and his company were the right folks to do the job," Buzzfeed News investigative reporter Alex Campbell said.

His company, Bio Recovery Corporation, had decades of experience. It was tapped by New York City to decontaminate Dr. Spencer's apartment in Hamilton Heights, as well as The Gutter bowling alley in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, which Spencer had visited the night before he fell ill.

But an investigation by Buzzfeed News found Pane had only been cleaning up hazardous waste for one year. Campbell learned Pane, a convicted felon, got into the industry by convincing an unsuspecting sister to sell her dead brother's business, a well-regarded cleaning company. She said she was duped.

Campbell notes while the company existed previously, Pane was never really a part of it.

"Bio Recovery Corporation, up until 2013, was owned by somebody completely different," Campbell said.

Pane's been at the center of controversy before. Back in 2008, during the height of the financial crisis, he started two loan modification companies.

"Amerimod knows how to get the best terms for our borrowers because we know the industry inside and out," he said on his company's infomercial.

They were a scam, and New York State sued him, Nair reported. Pane was held liable for more than $12.5 million. He's only paid back $62,000.

"A few months later is when he bought the Bio Recovery company," Campbell said.

He had only been slapped on the wrist, so he did it again with a new company, Nair reported

Last month, it was the attorney general's office who quietly alerted officials to Pane's legal problems, prompting New York City to quickly cut ties with Bio Recovery Corporation.

Representatives of the New York City Department of Health and Mental Hygiene admitted they were unaware of his background, but defended their decision to hire the company. In a statement to CBS News, they "vigorously reviewed all of Bio-Recovery's cleanup work, and determined it was successfully performed."

When CBS News spoke to Pane, he denied misrepresenting himself, but refused an on-camera interview.

Attorneys for the company called Buzzfeed's story "slanderous" and "replete with misstatements, lies and outright falsehoods."

New York State is looking into Pane's latest claims but he has yet to be charged with any crimes.

"He comes across as very persuasive," Campbell said. "Even in our brief discussions with him, he is very persuasive at times and can be very charming too."

Campbell said he thinks that's part of how he fooled people.

Despite making misleading statements, Pane insists when discussing professional experience, he was speaking for the company, not himself.

As far as exaggerating your experience -- there's nothing illegal about that.

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