Missing Person Skylar Dials of Griffin, GA

The Spalding County Sheriff’s Office was looking for a missing 9-year-old girl Friday night.

Skylar Dials was last known to be in the 600 block of Yarbrough Mill Road in Griffin.

She was wearing a red and white Aeropostale sweater, pink and silver Sketchers and possibly blue jeans, authorities said. She also may have been wearing silver ball-type earrings.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Anyone with information on Skylar’s location should contact the Spalding County Sheriff’s Office at 770-467-4282.

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Missing Person 14 Yr Old Taylor Robinett of Gadsden, AL

Gadsden Police are seeking information on a 14-year-old girl last seen on Tuesday.

Taylor Robinett, 14, is a white female, 5’4″ tall and 110 pounds. She has brown hair and blue eyes.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Police say she last went to school Tuesday, but didn’t catch her ride home. She was last seen in the 900 block of Fourth Avenue. They believe she’s a runaway and staying with people who know she has been reported missing.

Anyone with information on Robinett’s location is asked to call dispatch at 256-549-4578.

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Identity Theft Roscoe, IL Woman Sentenced to 44 Months

A Roscoe woman will spend a total of 44 months in federal prison for mail fraud, theft of U.S. mail, and identity theft.

Forty-year-old Stacy L. Wallin was sentenced on Friday, December 21, to 20 months for mail fraud and theft of U.S. mail, which will be served concurrently, and 24 months for aggravated identity theft, which will be served consecutively to the 20 months. She must also serve $34,750 in restitution to victims.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Wallin admitted to coming up with a scheme to defraud at least 10 Roscoe residents and local financial institutions between June 2011 and June 2012. Wallin fraudulently acquired merchandise and at least $30,000 in cash by paying for the merchandise and getting the cash with credit cards that did not belong to her.

Wallin admitted in the plea agreement to stealing mail containing personal identifiable information from other people’s mailboxes. She would then use that information to apply for and open credit card accounts in those people’s names and use the cards to buy merchandise online and at local businesses. She also used the cards to get cash from ATMs at local banks.

Wallin pleaded guilty to the charges in September 2012.

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Accident Reconstruction Train and Truck Collide in Harrodsburg, KY

A train in Mercer county smashed into a pick up truck Friday evening.

http://liarcatchers.com/accident_reconstruction.html

The crash happened just before 8 o’clock in Harrodsburg at Lexington Avenue and East Street. Police said 25-year old Gary Cox was driving the truck at the time of the crash.
Authorities said the train conductors story and Cox’s don’t match-up. Police said Cox said his brakes weren’t working properly after being worked on – the conductor said Cox was coming at a high rate of speed, as though he was trying to beat the train. Cox was taken to the hospital, the extent of his injuries are not known

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Fraud Investigation Webster Groves, MO Man to Spend Life in Prison for Ponzi Scheme

KANSAS CITY, MO—David M. Ketchmark, Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced today that a Webster Groves, Missouri attorney and clergyman will spend the rest of his life in prison for leading a fraud conspiracy that stole more than $56 million from its victims.

Martin T. Sigillito, 63, of Webster Groves, will be sentenced on December 28, 2012, to 40 years in federal prison without parole by U.S. District Judge Linda Reade of the Northern District of Iowa. The court issued a sentencing memorandum on Thursday, December 20, 2012, stating the intent to impose a penalty that would be the equivalent of a life sentence, which will be imposed at the sentencing hearing later this month.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

“Sigillito’s criminal conduct was calloused and calculating,” the court stated in yesterday’s sentencing memorandum, “causing fear and anguish to the people who trusted him. Sigillito has not taken responsibility for the economic and emotional damage that he has caused to his victims…Sigillito had many years of prestige, luxury, and comfort at the expense of the victims.”

On April 13, 2012, Sigillito was found guilty of 20 counts charged in an April 28, 2011, federal indictment and has remained in federal custody since the trial. A sentencing hearing was held on October 3, 2012, and the court took the matter under advisement.

The court’s sentencing memorandum noted that federal sentencing guidelines recommend a sentence of life in federal prison. In this case, the court could have imposed a sentence of 325 years by imposing the statutory maximum sentence on each count of conviction and running the sentence on each count consecutive to all other sentences imposed. It is within the discretion of the court to determine how many years is sufficient to ensure an effective life sentence. Because Sigillito is 63 years old, the memorandum states, a 40-year sentence has the effect of a life sentence. In this case, the court stated, there is little to no practical difference between a 40-year sentence, a sentence of 325 years, and a life sentence.

The court will also order Sigillito to pay $30,670,714 in restitution, which is the collective actual loss amount of his victims. The court found, however, that the intended loss amount of the scheme was much higher. When the scheme collapsed in May 2012, 111 lenders were owed a total of approximately $56 million, which includes their original loans plus the interest they should have received. “It could be convincingly argued,” the court’s memorandum states, that the intended loss actually exceeded $70.5 million.

The court also announced its intent to order Sigillito to forfeit to the government property that was seized by law enforcement officials, including hundreds of antique books, antique maps and prints, antique jewelry, antique coins, antique artifacts, six Persian rugs, dozens of bottles of cognac champagne, whiskey and wine, a 2006 Volvo S40, $19,500 in cash, $19,237 from bank accounts, and residential property in Marthasville, Missouri. A preliminary forfeiture order was issued on October 18, 2012, and the court announced its intent to issue a final forfeiture order.

Sigillito was found guilty of participating in a conspiracy to commit wire and mail fraud. During a 10-year period from 2000 to 2010, more than 140 investors in the United States loaned a total of $52.5 million to co-conspirators through a Ponzi scheme that was known as the British Lending Program (BLP). Victims believed they were loaning money for legitimate real estate development projects in England, but in reality, most of their money was kept by Sigillito and co-defendant James Scott Brown, 67, of Leawood, Kansas (or used to pay interest and principal to other lenders). Sigillito gained more than $6.3 million from the fraud scheme and used it to support an affluent lifestyle.

Sigillito was also found guilty of nine counts of wire fraud. On nine separate occasions, Sigillito wired funds across state lines as part of the fraud scheme. The wire transfers typically involved hundreds of thousands of dollars and, in one case, a transfer of $15 million. The jury also convicted Sigillito of four counts of mail fraud related to documents that were mailed to lenders and six counts of money laundering related to financial transactions with funds illegally obtained by wire fraud.

Brown and co-defendant Derek J. Smith, 68, of Oxfordshire in the United Kingdom, each pleaded guilty to their roles in the conspiracy. Brown was sentenced to three years in federal prison without parole, and Smith was sentenced to five years of probation. As part of their guilty pleas, each was required to forfeit significant real estate holdings.

The Defendants

Sigillito is an attorney and an ordained priest and bishop in the church of the American Anglican Convocation. Sigillito, doing business as Martin T. Sigillito and Associates Ltd., maintained an office in Clayton, Missouri. The business claimed to provide international business consulting services but did not have any actual associates or law partners and employed only a single clerical assistant. Sigillito portrayed himself as an expert in international law and finance and an experienced international businessman and attorney. He also claimed he was a lecturer at Oxford University in England, based upon his participation in an annual summer program of continuing legal education at Oxford through the University of Missouri-Kansas City.

Sigillito had very few, if any, law clients. Instead, Sigillito’s primary occupation from 2000 to 2010 was the BLP. Sigillito was a member of several exclusive, private clubs in St. Louis (including The Racquet Club and the Boone Valley Golf Club) and spent some of the fees on collecting rare and antique books, maps, prints, coins, jewelry, artifacts, liquor, and rugs. He routinely traveled first class, including internationally, took his family on expensive vacations, purchased a country home in Marthasville, Missouri; employed a chauffeur; sent his children to private schools; purchased and leased Volvo automobiles; and invested in a condominium project at the Lake of the Ozarks in Missouri. Prior to 2000 Sigillito was not financially successful, was divorced, and had declared bankruptcy.

Brown, an attorney, practiced law in England for several years prior to 2000. Brown also participated in the UMKC program at Oxford University. Between 2000 and 2010, Brown did not actively practice law; instead, Brown’s primary occupation was the BLP, from which he took substantial fees. Brown did business as British American Group and as J. Scott Brown and Associates.

Smith was a structural engineer and a business and real estate speculator/developer who resided near London, England. Smith did business as Princess Hotels Management and as Distinctive Properties. Smith was previously successful, but during the 1990s, he acquired distressed hotel properties that were not profitable due to a recession in the English real estate market. By the end of the 1990s, Smith was in need of capital to maintain his ownership of several small hotels which were not trading profitably and to support his retention of several options to purchase land.

The British Lending Program

The British Lending Program (BLP) operated as a Ponzi scheme and served as a fee-generating machine for the benefit of co-conspirators. Rather than sending the funds to England for use in real estate projects as promised to investors, Sigillito pooled lender’s funds in his attorney trust account in the United States. Rarely would funds from this account ever be sent to Smith. Rather, the funds were used to pay fees to Sigillito and Brown for initiating the loans. In cases where lenders requested payments of interest on their loan or sought to withdraw their funds from the program, the funds used to pay them came not from any profitable business of Smith’s but instead from funds that had been contributed

Smith did not receive the bulk of the funds he “borrowed,” nor was he sending funds from profits to the U.S. to pay lenders. Throughout most of the BLP, Smith did not actually generate any profit from any of his ventures. Instead, new loan funds were actually consumed by the monthly interest payment and redemption obligations to lenders and frequent, large fees taken by Brown and Sigillito.

Between 2003 and 2012 (the only time for which bank records are available) Sigillito took “fees” totaling $6.3 million, and Brown took “fees” totaling approximately $1.4 million. Smith received $2.7 million. Approximately $27.9 million was used to pay interest and principal to lenders. All BLP funds were dissipated and as of June 2010, the BLP had no funds.

In the original, legitimate form of the BLP, funds were loaned by U.S. investors/lenders for short terms at high interest rates. Early loan funds were sent to the United Kingdom and lenders received written loan agreements through a British law firm. Brown and his family were lenders in the BLP, then Brown began soliciting other lenders and took finder’s fees for himself.

Sigillito became involved in the BLP in 2000. Brown and Sigillito developed a packet of marketing materials and began marketing the BLP to other U.S. lenders. Later, Brown and Sigillito also utilized third-party recruiters to locate new investors and bring their funds into the BLP. Soon afterward, Smith became the sole and exclusive borrower in the BLP and became the focal point of marketing efforts by Sigillito and Brown.

Sigillito and Brown marketed the BLP to lenders based upon a number of false, fraudulent, and deceptive material representations.

Sigillito told investors that Smith and the BLP had a track record of success and a unique ability to identify undervalued properties and properties whose value could be greatly increased through the re‑zoning process. Smith’s goal was to sell or “flip” the properties for a profit. Conspirators also claimed that Smith was a highly successful real estate owner and developer who generated cash flow and profits from “flipping” properties and options. In reality, Sigillito knew that Smith’s trading properties were unprofitable and required funding to avoid foreclosure, that Smith’s re‑zoning efforts did not produce successful property flips, and that Smith could never repay the large sums which had been borrowed in his name from BLP lenders.

Sigillito claimed that Smith was willing to borrow at, and could afford to pay, high rates of interest and that British banking practices made it cumbersome for Smith to borrow funds in a timely fashion to take advantage of time-sensitive opportunities. In reality, no real estate developer could afford to make enough money from BLP loans with the small amount of funds left over after payment of interest and fees to make a profit and to meet BLP interest and redemption obligations. Also, as Sigillito knew, Smith could not borrow from a traditional lending institution because he lacked sufficient equity in his properties to serve as collateral, because his hotels were not profitable, and because his options could not serve as loan collateral.

Sigillito also claimed that there was little or no risk of not being repaid in full, because the present market value of Smith’s assets exceeded his liabilities by a ratio of at least 2-to-1 and often as high as 6-to-1. In reality, Sigillito knew that Smith’s financial statements were false and misleading.

Sigillito told investors/lenders that their loan funds were sent to Smith in England for use in his real estate activities and that payments of interest and principal came from England out of Smith’s business revenues and profits. In reality, the vast majority of BLP loan funds were never sent to or received by Smith for use in productive business activities. Instead, the vast majority of funds remained under the control of Sigillito and Brown; the funds were used to pay fees to Sigillito, Brown, and others and to pay interest and principal to prior BLP lenders.

The court found that Sigillito’s criminal conduct involved primarily vulnerable victims. Sigillito intentionally sought out victims who were at or approaching retirement age in an attempt to gain control of savings that were in IRAs. Although the loans were primarily for one-year terms, Sigillito knew that IRA holders would incur penalties if they withdrew their funds early. Thus, they would be less likely to demand repayment of their principal and would give the conspirators additional time. Many BLP lenders placed a great deal of trust in Sigillito and Brown based on their claimed expertise, their status as attorneys, affinity through family connections and private organizations, and particularly Sigillito’s mastery of multiple languages, his status as a board member of The Racquet Club and his status as a bishop. Sigillito took advantage of several lenders who were particularly vulnerable due to age, friendship, lack of financial expertise, family circumstances, and faith.

Sigillito used high-pressure tactics to persuade some lenders to loan funds to Smith. As part of his sales tactics, Sigillito often avoided giving direct and specific answers to questions about documentation and his claimed due diligence in the BLP. Once loans were “closed,” Sigillito avoided direct contact with lenders.

Many victims loaned funds that had been saved for retirement and were held in Individual Retirement Accounts. Many IRA lenders let their “interest” accrue and also rolled their loans over annually for years, each time receiving a signed loan agreement for a new, larger amount. Thus, many IRA lenders were led to believe that their IRA accounts were growing and that they could be relied upon in retirement.

This case is being prosecuted by Jess Michaelsen, Steven Holtshouser, and Richard Finneran, Special Attorneys to the U.S. Attorney General. It was investigated by the FBI and IRS-Criminal Investigation.

This news release, as well as additional information about the office of the United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, is available online at http://www.justice.gov/usao/mow/index.html.

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Pedophile Tracking Contractor in Afghanistan 20 Yrs for Sending Child Porn

FORT WORTH, TX—A New Hampshire man stationed in Afghanistan who sent child pornography to a Fort Worth, Texas, resident, whom he met while he attended DynCorp International job training in Fort Worth, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge John McBryde to 240 months in federal prison and a lifetime of supervised release, announced U.S. Attorney Sarah R. Saldaña of the Northern District of Texas. James M. Markwith, 31, pleaded guilty in September 2012 to an indictment charging one count of transporting and distributing a visual depiction of a minor for importation into the U.S. Markwith has been in federal custody since his arrest in June 2012 in the District of New Hampshire on a related charge filed in the Northern District of Texas.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

According to documents filed in the case, soon after Markwith met B.F. in Fort Worth earlier this year, he was transferred to Kabul, Afghanistan. Markwith and B.F. continued to communicate through Skype instant messaging, telephone, and e-mail. In early April 2012, the conversations became sexual in nature, and on April 7, 2012, Markwith sent B.F. images of child pornography.

This matter was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice, to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. Led by U.S. Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend, and prosecute individuals who sexually exploit children and to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.usdoj.gov/psc. For more information about Internet safety education, please visit www.usdoj.gov/psc and click on the tab “Resources.”

The case was investigated by the FBI and prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Aisha Saleem.

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Fraud Investigation Richmond, KY Counterfeit Bill

RICHMOND — The discovery of a counterfeit $20 bill left in a printer that was returned to Walmart last month helped lead police to the arrest of a Richmond man.

Dennarius J. Barnett, 19, of Maple Hill Drive, was charged Thursday with three counts of first-degree criminal possession of a forged instrument.

A Walmart employee reported Nov. 7 finding a $20 counterfeit in a printer that was allegedly returned by Barnett. Two other counterfeit bills also were located that were believed to have fallen from the printer, according to a Richmond police news release.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

On Thursday, RPD officers responded to a call informing them that the man who returned the printer was back at Walmart.

Barnett was identified as the suspect, and after interviewing him, the officers charged him in connection with the counterfeit bills. He was taken to the Madison County Detention Center.

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Missing Person Body of Longview Man Found, 2 Charged

Ronnie Joe Gammage never met a stranger, his family said, and had an almost childlike trust in others that may have made him easy prey.

The gentle giant was reported missing Dec. 8; his beaten, burned body was found late Wednesday in rural Upshur County.

On Thursday, Sarah Haslam, 20, and Daniel Jones, 19, both of Longview, were charged with aggravated kidnapping and capital murder in connection with Gammage’s death. A third capital murder warrant was issued for an unidentified person whom police say also played a role in Gammage’s death.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Haslam and Jones were each held Thursday in the Gregg County Jail on bonds of $1.3 million.

Gammage, who stood 6 feet, 8 inches tall and weighed about 265 pounds, was functional but mentally slow, his family said. Those whose paths crossed his said Gammage was peaceful, kind and friendly.

His family said Gammage lived by himself in Parkway Gardens apartments in Longview, drew disability payments and lived a simple life.

He was a person of routine. Rebecca Sheppard, an employee at Roadrunner Superette on Judson Road, a convenience store Gammage visited nearly every day, said she was stunned by his death. She remembered the 27-year-old as a “pretty nice guy.”

“He was always kind to me,” Sheppard said. “I never thought anyone would want to hurt him.”

Gammage always wore T-shirts and jeans or Western wear and refused to buy the same kind of cigarette each day. Each day’s pack was a new flavor or brand, she said.

Betty Cannon remembered her cousin as loving and determined.

“He would help anybody and was always in a good mood,” she said. “And even though he was slow, he had an excellent memory … He loved country music … If a song came on he could tell you the name, artist, year.”

His peaceful life apparently ended Nov. 29 outside the store where he shopped daily when he was mugged — threatened and robbed — by three unidentified people. Gammage later filed a report telling police the trio had taken his wallet. Employees of the convenience store said police watched surveillance video, but it was inconclusive. The three people who robbed Gammage could not be identified.

The next Tuesday, Haslam, Jones and two other people tried to cash a check Gammage had given them “to return property stolen from him by other parties,” said Kristie Brian, Longview police spokeswoman. She said it was not clear if the stolen property was the wallet taken the previous week.

But the day after Gilmer National Bank refused to cash the $400 check because of insufficient funds, police say four people confronted Gammage at Waffle House on East Loop 281 in Longview, slashing a tire on his truck.

Gammage was then lured into Haslam’s car, according to statements from suspects and investigators.

“They told Gammage they would take him to get a tire. Instead they took Gammage to a location off of Loop 281 … at this location, Jones said he and the other two began beating Gammage using their feet and hands,” wrote Longview police Sgt. Darin Lair in the affidavit for probable cause in Jones’ arrest.

“The suspects feared they would be seen by passing motorists, so they placed Gammage back into Haslam’s car against his will where he was not free to leave,” wrote Detective David Cheatham in an affidavit for Haslam’s arrest.

With Haslam driving, the three drove with Gammage near the intersection of Martin Lane and Mockingbird Road southeast of Gilmer in rural Upshur County, where they made Gammage get out and walk to the middle of an open field.

“He was made to sit on the ground and he was, again, beaten,” Cheatham wrote. Haslam said she went back to the car, leaving Gammage with Jones and the other unidentified person.

Lair, writing of Jones’ statement, said, “(Jones) took out a knife and cut Gammage’s throat, which he believed killed him.” Jones then poured gasoline on Gammage’s body and set it on fire.

On Dec. 8, after not hearing from her son for four days, Gammage’s mother, Frankie Gammage, reported her son missing.

On Wednesday, police released surveillance video from the Dec. 4 drive-thru bank visit, asking the public for help identifying the people in the car. Police said they were flooded with tips that led to interviews with Jones and Haslam.

Frankie Gammage said Thursday she drew comfort knowing her son had been found.

“I am just glad they found him. It’s not over, but at least we know what happened to him,” she said.

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Insurance Fraud Lumberton Farmer Pleaded Guilty

A Lumberton farmer pleaded guilty on Wednesday to more than $1 million in crop insurance fraud, U.S. Attorney Thomas G. Walker said in a news release.

Harry Dean Canady, 63, pleaded guilty to multiple crimes, including fraud, lying and identity theft, in U.S. District Court in Raleigh. A sentencing date has not been set.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

Canady raised tobacco, corn, wheat, soybeans and other crops. The news release says that from August 2006 through December 2009, he and others defrauded the federal crop insurance program through false reports of his crop production and false insurance claims of crop losses.

The other alleged conspirators aren’t named in the news release or indictment.

The release says Canady committed identity theft by putting some of his crop sales in the names of his grandchildren, and that he also used fictitious names for some crop sales. Some sales were made “under the table” for cash with co-conspirators, the release says. These efforts were to hide the sales from authorities after he had filed insurance claims of crop losses.

Canady learned he was under investigation in 2008, the release says, and since then has threatened violence against lawmen.

Canady’s fraud netted him a little more than $1 million in fraudulent insurance payments, the release says.

Canady also pleaded guilty to being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm.

He pleaded guilty in 1998 to involuntary manslaughter in the death of his brother, who he ran over with a pickup after the two had a fist fight.

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Wrongful Death 4 Dead Along Rural rd. in PA

HOLLIDAYSBURG, Pa. (AP) — A shooting along a rural road Friday left four people dead, including the gunman, and three state troopers injured, authorities said.

The shooting scene “extended over several miles” in Frankstown Township, about 70 miles west of Harrisburg, Blair County District Attorney Rich Consiglio said.

The dead were three men and one woman, Consiglio said. It wasn’t immediately clear who killed the gunman.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

The victims’ identities weren’t immediately released.

Three state troopers were also injured during the melee.

One trooper was shot in his bulletproof vest and escaped serious injury, a state police spokesman said.

A second trooper was struck by broken glass when his vehicle was fired on, and a third trooper was in a crash involving the gunman, Consiglio said.

The public is not at risk, Consiglio said. Nearby schools weren’t placed on lockdown, township supervisor Mark Schroyer said.

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