Former TBW CEO Sentenced to 40 Months in Prison for Fraud Scheme

WASHINGTON—The former chief executive officer (CEO) of Taylor, Bean & Whitaker (TBW) was sentenced today to 40 months in prison for his role in a more than $2.9 billion fraud scheme that contributed to the failure of TBW. At one time, TBW was one of the largest privately held mortgage lending companies in the United States.
Paul Allen was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Leonie M. Brinkema in the Eastern District of Virginia. The sentence was announced by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride for the Eastern District of Virginia; Acting Special Inspector General Christy Romero for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (SIGTARP); Assistant Director in Charge James W. McJunkin of the FBI’s Washington Field Office; Michael P. Stephens, Deputy Inspector General of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD-OIG); Jon T. Rymer, Inspector General of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC-OIG); Steve A. Linick, Inspector General of the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA-OIG); and Victor S. O. Song, Chief of the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI). Allen, 55, of Oakton, Va., pleaded guilty in April 2011 to one count of making false statements and one count of conspiring to commit bank and wire fraud. Co-conspirator Sean Ragland, a former senior financial analyst at TBW who reported to Allen, was also sentenced today by Judge Brinkema to three months in prison. Ragland, 37, of San Antonio, pleaded guilty in March 2011 to one count of conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud. Allen and Ragland both admitted to conspiring with Lee Bentley Farkas, the former chairman of TBW, and others, to defraud financial institutions that had invested in Ocala Funding LLC, a facility wholly-owned by TBW. Farkas was convicted on April 19, 2011, on 14 counts of fraud for his role in masterminding the scheme, which was one of the largest bank frauds in the country. Farkas is scheduled to be sentenced on June 27, 2011. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) has a civil action pending against Farkas in the Eastern District of Virginia. Co-conspirators Catherine Kissick, a former senior vice president of Colonial Bank and head of its Mortgage Warehouse Lending Division (MWLD); Teresa Kelly, a former operations supervisor in Colonial Bank’s MWLD; Raymond Bowman, the former president of TBW; and Desiree Brown, the former treasurer of TBW, have also pleaded guilty for their participation in the scheme. Earlier this month, Kissick was sentenced to eight years in prison, Brown was sentenced to six years in prison, Bowman was sentenced 30 months in prison and Kelly was sentenced to 3 months in prison.
“As TBW’s chief executive officer, Mr. Allen served as an accomplice to Lee Farkas and his massive fraud scheme,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “He concealed TBW’s staggering deficits through false financial reports, which ultimately caused investors to lose more than $1.5 billion. Today’s sentence sends a strong message that corporate fraud by senior executives will not be tolerated. At the same time, it demonstrates that substantial assistance in the government’s investigation and prosecution of corporate fraud will be taken into account at sentencing.”
“Paul Allen was a well-respected mortgage executive hired by Lee Farkas to be TBW’s chief executive officer. Working from Oakton, Va., Mr. Allen led Ocala Funding, a TBW multi-billion dollar lending facility that was used to defraud investors of more than $1 billion,” said U.S. Attorney MacBride. “Mr. Allen’s sentence reflects his ultimate cooperation with this investigation, but also sends the message that unless executives expose and stop fraud when they first learn of it, they will be punished.”
According to court documents and information presented at trial, Allen and Ragland participated in the scheme from early 2005 through August 2009 by distributing materially false documents to investors in Ocala Funding that misrepresented the financial condition of the facility. The fraud scheme ultimately caused investors in Ocala Funding to lose more than $1.5 billion and Colonial Bank to lose $900 million. According to court documents and information presented at trial, TBW began running overdrafts in its master bank account at Colonial Bank because of TBW’s inability to meet its operating expenses, which included payroll, servicing payments owed to third-party purchasers of loans and/or mortgage-backed securities and other obligations. In or about 2002, Farkas and other co-conspirators engaged in a series of fraudulent actions to cover up the overdrafts, first by sweeping overnight money from one TBW account with excess funds into another, and later through the fictitious “sales” of mortgage loans to Colonial Bank, a fraud scheme the conspirators dubbed “Plan B.” The conspirators accomplished Plan B by selling Colonial Bank mortgage loans that did not exist or that TBW had already committed or sold to other third-party investors. As Plan B evolved, co-conspirators at TBW also caused TBW to engage in sham sales of groups of mortgage loans, known as “pools,” that other entities already owned to Colonial Bank. As a result, false information was entered on Colonial Bank’s books and records, giving the appearance that the bank owned interests in legitimate pools of mortgage loans, when in fact the pools had no value and could not be securitized or sold. Neither Allen nor Ragland participated in the effort to cover up TBW’s overdrafts or Plan B. Additionally, the co-conspirators at TBW caused TBW to misappropriate more than $1.5 billion in collateral from Ocala Funding. According to court documents, both Allen and Ragland played significant roles in the Ocala Funding misappropriation. The misappropriation caused Colonial Bank and the Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation (Freddie Mac) to falsely believe that they each had an undivided ownership interest in thousands of the same loans worth hundreds of millions of dollars. According to court documents, the fraud scheme also included an effort by certain conspirators in the fall of 2008 to obtain $570 million in taxpayer funding through the Capital Purchase Program, a sub-program of the U.S. Treasury Department’s TARP. In connection with the application, Colonial BancGroup submitted financial data and filings that included materially false information related to mortgage loan and securities assets held by Colonial Bank as a result of the fraudulent activity at TBW. Colonial BancGroup never received the TARP funding. According to court documents, Allen played a key role in causing materially false information to be submitted to and received by the government in connection with Colonial Bank’s TARP application. Ragland was not aware of this aspect of the fraud scheme. In August 2009, the Alabama State Banking Department, Colonial Bank’s regulator, seized the bank and appointed the FDIC as receiver. Colonial BancGroup also filed for bankruptcy in August 2009.
“Instead of upholding his position of power and trust as CEO of TBW, Paul Allen chose the path of fraud and deception in helping facilitate the long-running fraud carried out by TBW and Colonial Bank. Fortunately, the scheme came to a halt when an attempt was made to steal more than a half billion dollars from the TARP,” said Acting Special Inspector General for the TARP Romero. “Today’s sentence appropriately recognizes the severity of Allen’s participation in the fraud along with his cooperation in the Government’s investigation.”
“As a result of this complex fraud scheme, these defendants cost investors and our financial markets billions of dollars,” said Assistant Director in Charge McJunkin. “Today’s sentence shows that those who take advantage of investors and our banking and mortgage systems will be held accountable. The FBI will continue to work with our law enforcement partners and remain vigilant in investigating these illegal transactions.”
“Today’s sentencing marks the culmination of a large effort on the part of this agency and of the law enforcement and regulatory community,” said Deputy Inspector General Stephens of HUD-OIG. “More importantly, however, it shows our nation that is slowly recovering from a damaged housing market that we are committed to bringing to justice those whose pernicious behavior contributed to this condition.”
“The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) Office of Inspector General is pleased to join our law enforcement colleagues in announcing this sentencing,” said Inspector General Rymer of FDIC. “We are particularly concerned in cases like this one where fraudulent activities involving employees of Colonial Bank in association with officials of Taylor, Bean and Whitaker contributed to the failure of Colonial Bank, resulting in a $3.8 billion loss to the Deposit Insurance Fund. We are committed to continuing our investigations of such criminal misconduct to help ensure the integrity of the financial services industry and maintain the safety and soundness of the nation’s financial institutions and the viability of the fund.”
“Paul Allen used his extensive experience gained from employment with the government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) to assist Lee Farkas in his massive fraud scheme,” said Inspector General Linick of FHFA-OIG. “This sentence sends a strong message to individuals who would try to defraud Freddie Mac and American taxpayers, who have invested over $163 billion in the GSEs to date.”
The case is being prosecuted by Deputy Chief Patrick Stokes and Trial Attorney Robert Zink of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Charles Connolly and Paul Nathanson of the Eastern District of Virginia. This case was investigated by SIGTARP, FBI’s Washington Field Office, FDIC-OIG, HUD-OIG, FHFA-OIG and the IRS-CI. The department recognizes the substantial assistance of the SEC. The department also recognizes the assistance of the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN) of the Department of the Treasury.
This prosecution was brought in coordination with President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For more information about the task force visit: www.StopFraud.gov.
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Former Weslaco ISD Trustee Convicted of Accepting Bribe for School Renovation Project

A former trustee for the Weslaco Independent School District (WISD) has pleaded guilty to accepting a bribe in exchange for using his official capacity to influence the award of a contract on a school renovation project, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno announced today.
Joe Marines, 55, of Weslaco, Texas, pleaded guilty today to a Hobbs Act violation. Marines admitted that in August 2006, while serving as a trustee for WISD and the district was involved in the bidding process for the renovation of Roosevelt Elementary School, he met with an FBI informant who was soliciting a contract on the project. Marines admitted he received $500 in exchange for Marines exerting his influence as a trustee to award a subcontracting job on the project. Later that same month, the FBI informant paid Marines an additional $1000 for the same purpose.
A conviction for a violation of the Hobbs Act is punishable by no more than 20 years in prison and/or a fine of up to $250,000.
U.S. District Judge Nancy F. Atlas, who accepted Marines’ guilty plea and convicted him of the federal felony offense has set the case for sentencing on Sept. 6, 2011. Marines will be permitted to remain on bond pending the sentencing hearing.
The investigation leading to the charges was conducted by the FBI and Assistant U.S. Attorney James McAlister is prosecuting the case.
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Oklahoma Man Pleads Guilty to Kidnapping Women Also Admits Illegal Use of Firearm and Robbery Charges

An Oklahoma man pled guilty on June 16, 2011, to Kidnapping (two counts), Carrying and Use of a Firearm During a Crime of Violence, and Interference with Commerce by Robbery, in the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, Stephen R. Wigginton, announced today. Carey L. Breshers, Jr., 51, of Oklahoma, is scheduled for sentencing on October 14, 2011. Each of the Kidnapping counts carry a maximum penalty of life imprisonment, a $250,000 fine, and five years’ supervised release. Use of a Firearm During a Crime of Violence carries a sentence of not less than seven years’ imprisonment up to life imprisonment, the sentence to run consecutively to the sentences imposed on the Kidnapping counts, a $250,000 fine, and five years’ supervised release. Interference with Commerce by Robbery carries a maximum sentence of up to 20 years’ imprisonment, a $250,000 fine, and up to three years’ supervised release.
According to court documents, on October 26, 2010, at around 10:00 a.m., Breshers walked into World Finance in O’Fallon, Illinois, and held two female employees at gunpoint while questioning them about their personal checking accounts, finances, and vehicles, as well as the location of the bank for the business. He eventually directed one of the employees to write a company check for $3000. Breshers directed the women to leave their cell phones, lock the business, and come with him. He directed one of the employees to drive her car and directed the other to get in the backseat with him.
Breshers directed the women to attempt to cash the check at the O’Fallon branch of Regions Bank. After two unsuccessful attempts to cash the check, Breshers directed the women back to World Finance where he took $1,104 from the business. Breshers then directed the employees to drive him to St. Louis. During the drive, Breshers removed the firearm from his pocket and fiddled with it. He told the women that he had committed a similar crime in Oklahoma, and that he had safely released the victim in that situation. Breshers directed them to take the exit at I-44 and Jefferson and to drive around the back of an abandoned building where he released them. He left in the employee’s car which was later found at a Metro Link station in Missouri. Breshers was arrested on October 31, 2010, in Topeka, Kansas, in an unrelated incident, and found to be in possession of the firearm. He has been in custody since his arrest.
Information for the Indictment was obtained by the O’Fallon Police Department, the FBI, and the St. Louis Metropolitan Police Department. The case is being handled by Assistant United States Attorney Kit Morrissey.
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Richard A. McFeely Special Agent in Charge, Baltimore Office Federal Bureau of Investigation

Good morning, Chairman Leahy and Senator Coons. Thank you for the opportunity to appear before you today to discuss the FBI’s coordination with federal, state, and local law enforcement here in Wilmington and across the country.
Since September 11, 2001, the FBI has shifted from a traditional crime-fighting agency into an intelligence-led, threat-driven organization, guided by clear operational strategies. Today’s FBI is focused on predicting and preventing the threats we face while at the same time engaging with the communities we serve. This shift has led to a greater reliance on technology, collaboration, and information sharing.  
The Baltimore field office of the FBI has jurisdictional responsibility for the State of Delaware where we maintain two Resident Agency (RA) offices. These RAs are responsible for all of the FBI’s information sharing and investigative work in Delaware.   In addition to task force participation, a number of special agents in Delaware serve in an official liaison role and coordinate with federal, state, and municipal law enforcement agencies. Some of these agents are regularly embedded with the partner agencies, where they facilitate the efficient and frequent exchange of information and work to better understand the intelligence needs of FBI partners.
There was a day in law enforcement when teamwork and partnership were virtues. Today, they are absolute necessities.  Also of great necessity is the ability to share real-time information that allows both the FBI and its partners the world over to cross jurisdictional boundaries and quickly ‘connect the dots’ when every minute counts.  Gone are the days when information was held onto for fears of compromising investigations; the benefits of full and open sharing with our partners has proven time and time again to be more valuable than the close holding of intelligence. 
Information Sharing
The FBI has two strategies we rely on to push information out to our partners:  one is a formalized structure and the other is informal and tailored to each individual jurisdiction. 
From a formalized perspective, the FBI’s National Information Sharing Strategy (NISS) ensures that information is shared as fully and appropriately as possible with federal, state, local, and tribal partners in the intelligence and law enforcement communities.  The NISS is based on the principle that FBI information and information technology systems must be designed to ensure that those protecting the public have the information they need to take action.
The NISS includes three components: Law Enforcement National Data Exchange (N-DEx); OneDOJ; and the Law Enforcement Online (LEO) network.
For its part, N-DEx provides a nationwide capability to exchange data derived from incident and event reports. It serves as an electronic catalog of structured criminal justice information—such as police reports—that provides a “single point of discovery;” leverages technology to relate massive amounts of data that is useful information; automates discovery of patterns and linkages to detect and deter crime and terrorism; and affords enhanced nationwide law enforcement communication and collaboration.
The process of connecting the dots between seemingly unrelated pieces of criminal data housed in different places is the backbone of N-DEx. The system enables its law enforcement users to submit certain data to a central repository—located at our Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) Division in West Virginia—where it is compared against data already on file from local, state, tribal, and federal agencies to identify links and similarities among persons, places, things, and activities across jurisdictional boundaries. The state of Delaware is a full partner in the N-DEx project.
OneDOJ enables the FBI to join participating federal, state, tribal, and local law enforcement agencies in regional full-text information sharing systems under standard technical procedures and policy agreements.
Lastly, the LEO network provides web-based communications to the law enforcement community to exchange information, conduct online education programs, and participate in professional special interest groups and topically focused dialogue. It is interactive and provides state-of-the-art functions such as real-time chat capability, news groups, distance learning, and articles on law enforcement issues.
LEO started in 1995 as a small dial-up service with just 20 members. Now, it has more than 100,000 members across the world and a host of features and capabilities offered through a Virtual Private Network on the Internet.
LEO offers many tools that cross-cut all law enforcement agencies on a global basis.  There is no other on-line service that matches its capabilities. For example, LEO hosts the eGuardian system, which is a sensitive but unclassified (SBU) information sharing platform developed to help meet the challenges of collecting and sharing terrorism-related activities amongst law enforcement agencies across various jurisdictions. It allows law enforcement agencies to combine new suspicious activity reports (SARs) along with existing (legacy) SAR reporting systems to form a single information repository accessible to thousands of law enforcement personnel. The information captured in eGuardian is also migrated to the FBI’s internal Guardian system, where it is assigned to the appropriate Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) for any further investigative action.
LEO is also home to the Virtual Command Center (VCC). In Delaware, I have made the VCC the main centerpiece of our strategy to share information in a major crisis. VCC provides an “Events Board” feature which allows information to be posted as the event occurs and allows us to post photographs, scanned documents, and any information deemed pertinent to the crisis. Whatever agency is hosting the VCC can allow access to individual persons or entire agencies if needed.  Critical Incident Managers, such as emergency planners, now can remotely have access to a crisis without having to be on-scene.
The FBI is a participating member of the Law Enforcement Coordinating Committee (LECC) in the District of Delaware. The LECC serves as a catalyst for forging partnerships with federal, state, and local law enforcement and prosecutors.    
But our commitment to information sharing does not stop with our law enforcement partners. The FBI-sponsored InfraGard brings together representatives from the private and public sectors to help protect our nation’s critical infrastructure and key resources from attacks by terrorists, criminals, and others who would do us harm. It is a partnership that makes sense, since most U.S. infrastructure components—like utility companies, transportation systems, telecommunication networks, water and food suppliers, public health, and financial services—are privately owned and operated.
The following are just a few examples of the FBI’s efforts to share information and leverage all available resources and expertise to combat the threats posed by terrorism and criminal enterprises. 
Counterterrorism
As one of the few members of the U.S. Intelligence Community with a combined law enforcement and intelligence mission, the FBI serves as a critical link between the intelligence and law enforcement communities in the United States. We are committed to working together to prevent both crime and terrorism, here at home and with our partners around the world.
In Delaware, the FBI maintains a Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in the Wilmington RA. In addition to FBI agents, there are full-time Task Force Officers (TFOs) from partner agencies, including the Delaware State Police (DSP), U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF), Wilmington Police Department (WPD), Delaware Department of Corrections (DOC), and Delaware Division of Alcohol and Tobacco Enforcement (DATE).  Each of the JTTF TFOs has the necessary credentials and clearances required to fully participate. In total, 12 agencies participate and contribute to the Task Force. 
While JTTFs are certainly considered part of the FBI’s formalized information sharing strategy, many of our successes over the recent years have come from the benefit of co-location and direct outreach to our federal, state and local partners. For example, recognizing that much of the work of the FBI and the rest of the Intelligence Community are within a classified information environment, I have offered every Police Chief in Delaware the opportunity to apply for a SECRET security clearance. This is a vital part of our local information sharing strategy because every month, we bring in all the cleared Chiefs and provide a classified threat briefing, including: (1) timely Homeland threat reporting; (2) threat trend analysis; (3) information about specific terrorist groups and extremist activities; and (4) current investigations of the Baltimore JTTF.  
Cyber Crime
We have cyber squads in each of our 56 field offices around the country, with more than 1,000 specially trained agents, analysts, and digital forensic examiners. Together, they run complex undercover operations and examine digital evidence. They share information with our law enforcement and intelligence partners and they teach our counterparts—both at home and abroad—how best to investigate cyber threats. The Wilmington RA has agents specifically designated for cyber investigations with extensive specialized training.  In complex cyber cases, additional resources are provided by the Baltimore Field Office and FBI Headquarters.
Between 2008 and 2011, FBI Agents in the Wilmington and Dover RAs, working in coordination with the DSP High Tech Crimes Unit (HTCU), successfully investigated cyber criminals, such as child predators, producers of child pornography and distributors of child pornography. Ongoing joint investigations by the FBI/DSP HTCU involve other cyber-related violations, including computer intrusions, copyright infringement, wire fraud, and mail fraud.
Street Gangs and Violent Crime
Gangs are no longer limited to urban areas, but have migrated to more rural settings.  Gangs have also infiltrated our prisons and even the military. Gangs have diversified from drug running and petty crime to armed robbery, home invasions, mortgage and health care fraud, and even human trafficking.
While local neighborhood gangs pose the most serious crime threat in Delaware, national gangs such as the Bloods, Crips, and Almighty Latin Kings are present and active here. The Delaware Safe Streets Task Force has identified members of the Latin Kings operating in the New Castle County area, including the City of Wilmington. Latin King members are involved in a myriad of criminal activities, including the distribution and sale of narcotics, weapon trafficking, murder, assault, armed robbery, kidnapping, burglary, auto theft, money laundering, extortion, racketeering, public corruption and intimidation and alien smuggling. The gang is also known to order “hits” on correctional officers, rival gang members and members who fail to follow orders.
To combat the threat posed by these dangerous gangs, I have redirected resources to the Delaware Violent Crime Safe Streets Task Force over the past year. This task force is focused on violent gangs, significant crimes of violence, and the apprehension of violent fugitives through sustained, proactive, coordinated investigations of racketeering, drug conspiracy, and firearms offenses.
In the past six months, working with the Wilmington Police Department, we have assigned analysts and Special Agents to provide in-depth assessments of repeat violent criminals and uncover indicators of organized gang activity. These assessments, reviewed by our partners in the Offices of the U.S. Attorney and Delaware Attorney General, will be used by the task force to both target the State’s most violent gang members and to determine the most appropriate judicial venue to dismantle these gangs. 
It is the FBI’s vision that the Delaware Information and Analysis Center (DIAC)—a primary fusion center within the national fusion center network— will become the state’s “all source” information repository. Our experience in Maryland has been that the fusion center structure offers the best forum to collect, analyze and disseminate information to the entire law enforcement community. To that end, I am working to staff the DIAC with a full-time analyst under the regular supervision of the Delaware State Police. 
Our efforts in this area have already helped the FBI and its partners realize some significant successes. In a recent homicide case, for example, an FBI informant provided valuable information regarding the suspected killers. This information was provided to WPD and resulted in the arrest and conviction of the killer. In another case, an FBI agent working with the DSP to solve an armed robbery case was able to identify a subject from a surveillance photograph as a Latin King.  This link enabled the DSP to link other robberies and Latin King members. As I appear before you today, all of the agencies on the Delaware Safe Streets Task Force, including the NCCPD, WPD, DSP, DIAC, FBI, ATF, and DEA, are working to identify active members of the organization for use in ongoing and future investigations. 
White Collar Crime
As the home of some of the nation’s largest banks and credit card companies, Delaware is an inviting target for white collar criminals. The FBI works closely with local agencies to detect and investigate fraud, theft, or embezzlement occurring within or against Delaware’s financial community. In one recent case, the FBI initiated a mortgage fraud investigation based on information provided by the New Castle County Police Department (NCCPD) and the U.S. Marshals.  During the course of a parental kidnapping investigation, the NCCPD and Marshals discovered that David Matuisewicz had fraudulently obtained a second mortgage on his home by forging his ex-wife’s signature on Wilmington Savings Fund Society (WSFS) documents. Working with the FBI, the NCCPD and Marshals discovered that Matuisewicz had used the proceeds from the mortgage fraud to take his three young daughters out of the U.S. By working together, the FBI, NCCPD, and Marshals located Matusiewicz and the children and traced the money. As a result of this joint effort, the children were returned to their custodial parent and Matusiewicz was sentenced to four years in jail, five years of supervised release and a $9,600 fine. In addition, $250,000 in mortgage fraud proceeds were recovered and returned to WSFS Bank.
The FBI also participates in various working groups dedicated to sharing information on serious financial crimes. For example, the Delaware Mortgage Fraud Working Group reviews and coordinates ongoing investigations, complaints, threats and SARs related to mortgage fraud.  Participating agencies include, but are not limited to: FBI, Social Security Administration, IRS, Delaware Department of Justice (Attorney General’s Office), U.S. Housing and Urban Development (HUD OIG), and financial institutions.   The FBI also coordinates closely with the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Delaware Attorney General’s Office on potential financial frauds. These coordination meetings are critical to assessing and addressing the threat posed by white collar criminals operating in or impacting financial institutions in Delaware.
Drug Trafficking
Drug trafficking is often linked to gang activity and violent crime. The diversion of prescription drugs, such as Oxycodone, is an increasing source of revenue for drug dealers in Delaware and across the nation. The FBI, DEA, and the DSP are sharing information to stem the tide of prescription drugs entering the illegal drug networks in Delaware. In one recent case, the DSP informed the FBI of suspicious money laundering activity by a husband and wife team. Through their joint investigative effort, the FBI, DEA and DSP uncovered a large network of individuals who purchased Oxycodone pills and resold them at a profit to addicts and other drug dealers. As a result of this joint effort, three individuals were arrested on September 12, 2009, and charged with Conspiracy to Distribute Oxycodone and Distribution of Oxycodone. They have since pled guilty and are awaiting sentencing.
Intellectual Property
Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) violations, including theft of trade secrets, digital piracy, and trafficking counterfeit goods, result in billions of dollars of losses each year.  These threats also pose significant risk to U.S. public health and safety via counterfeit pharmaceuticals, electrical components, aircraft parts and automobile parts.  Protecting intellectual property bolsters confidence in our economy, creates opportunities for growth, and promotes fairness and competitiveness in the marketplace. 
IPR investigations are a high priority for the FBI.  The FBI is an active partner in, and is co-located at, the National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center (IPR Center), an interagency task force consisting of 18 member agencies mandated to combat intellectual property theft. Intellectual property investigations are extremely complicated and difficult to investigate. A criminal organization or hostile intelligence service no longer has to physically infiltrate our businesses or government buildings to steal secrets. With relatively unsophisticated computer hacking skills, terabytes of proprietary information can be downloaded with a few key strokes onto a device smaller than your thumb. U.S. businesses lose billions of dollars, the U.S. government loses critical technology and, oftentimes, these facts are never even known. 
A recent example of the FBI’s success in this arena in Delaware is the arrest of former DuPont scientist Dr. Hong Meng. Dr. Meng was a synthetic chemist with DuPont who worked to develop Organic Light Emitting Diodes (OLEDs), the future of lighting and display technologies. Unbeknownst to DuPont, Dr. Meng had covertly accepted a position with Peking University as a chemistry professor despite informing DuPont that he planned to transfer to their offices in Shanghai. Dr. Meng emailed trade secret information to his email account at Peking University, solicited investment funding from Chinese provincial governments, and applied for Chinese government grants for OLED-related research. Faced with compelling evidence collected by the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Delaware, Dr. Meng pleaded guilty to theft of trade secrets charges in June 2010. He was sentenced to fourteen months in jail and ordered to pay $58,000 in restitution to DuPont. 
Conclusion
The FBI remains committed to its responsibility to aggressively combat the threats posed by criminal elements in our communities. To maximize our current resources, we have used our expanded and maturing intelligence collection and analysis capabilities to better identify and understand the growing threat posed by violent criminals. We also continue to rely heavily on the strong relationships we have with our law enforcement and community partners. Much work remains to be done. We will continue to strive for better methods and enhanced communication among partners in law enforcement and the community. 
Thank you for allowing me the opportunity to testify before you today. I am happy to answer any questions at this time.
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Camano Island Man Pleads Guilty to Multi-State Crime Spree Colton Harris-Moore Pleads Guilty and Forfeits Any Proceeds from His Story

COLTON HARRIS-MOORE, 20, of Camano Island, Washington, pleaded guilty today in U.S. District Court in Seattle to seven charges in connection with his lengthy crime spree in the Pacific Northwest and across the United States to Indiana, ending in the Bahamas. HARRIS-MOORE pleaded guilty to bank burglary, two counts of interstate transportation of a stolen aircraft, interstate and foreign transportation of a stolen firearm, being a fugitive in possession of a firearm, piloting an aircraft without a valid airman’s certificate, and interstate transportation of a stolen vessel. HARRIS-MOORE remains in custody at the Federal Detention Center at SeaTac, Washington. He is scheduled to be sentenced on October 28, 2011. Under the terms of the plea agreement, both sides will recommend between 63 and 78 months in prison. However, Judge Richard A. Jones is not bound by the recommendations, and may sentence HARRIS-MOORE up to the maximum allowed by law.
“The many years of Mr. Harris-Moore avoiding responsibility for his criminal conduct have come to an end,” said U.S. Attorney Jenny A. Durkan. “We have ensured he will not profit from his crimes, and that his victims will be compensated to the greatest extent possible. While we cannot stop him from telling his story, we can make sure he never sees a dime for his crimes.”
Under the terms of the plea agreement, HARRIS-MOORE forfeits any financial gain from telling his story and the proceeds are to be used to compensate the victims of his crimes. A special master experienced in intellectual property rights is appointed to ensure fair dealing and that all proceeds go to the victims. HARRIS-MOORE is expected to enter pleas to state charges in Washington State Superior Court. County prosecutors will be working to schedule a date for HARRIS-MOORE to enter pleas to all the state charges.
The federal plea agreement details a number of crimes including multiple car thefts and burglaries – including one where HARRIS-MOORE confronted and threatened to harm a homeowner.
“This resolution would not be possible without the remarkable efforts of law enforcement and prosecutors from numerous counties in Washington and other states,” said U.S. Attorney Jenny A. Durkan.
The first charged criminal act in the plea agreement is the September 5, 2009, burglary of Islanders Bank in Eastsound, Washington. HARRIS-MOORE admits he attempted to break into the ATM and night deposit box at the bank, using tools he had stolen from the Ace Hardware store in Eastsound. He did more than $1,000 in damage.
Following the bank burglary, HARRIS-MOORE traveled to Creston, British Columbia, Canada. He stole a .32 caliber pistol and traveled with it for the next week. He crossed back into the U.S., and on September 29, 2009, HARRIS-MOORE stole a Cessna aircraft from Bonners Ferry, Idaho, and flew the plane to a location near Granite Falls, Washington, where it crashed. HARRIS-MOORE also admits he stole a second firearm, a .22 caliber pistol, during a burglary near Granite Falls, Washington. HARRIS-MOORE carried that pistol with him to his hiding place in the Eastsound Airport on Orcas Island, Washington.
HARRIS-MOORE admits that on February 10, 2010, he piloted an aircraft without an airman’s certificate during a flight he made in a stolen plane from Anacortes to Eastsound, Washington. He admits that on May 31, 2010, he stole a 34 foot boat, and traveled from Ilwaco, Washington, to Warrenton, Oregon.
The statement of facts in the plea agreement goes on to recount HARRIS-MOORE’s series of thefts and burglaries across the U.S.: multiple car thefts in Idaho and Wyoming; burglaries, thefts and auto thefts in South Dakota, Nebraska, Iowa and Indiana, including multiple burglaries at small airports. In Yankton County, South Dakota, HARRIS-MOORE threatened a homeowner after breaking into a residence. Finally, on July 4, 2010, HARRIS-MOORE stole his last aircraft from a hangar in Bloomington, Indiana. He crash landed the aircraft when it ran out of fuel on Abaco Island in the Bahamas. He was arrested in the Bahamas a few days later.
HARRIS-MOORE agrees in the plea agreement that the amount of loss caused to the victims by his crimes is at least $1,409,438.
“The FBI is pleased to see Harris-Moore accept responsibility for the significant financial losses he caused in a number of states during a crime spree that consumed substantial investigative resources from state, local and federal law enforcement agencies,” said Laura Laughlin, Special Agent in Charge of FBI, Seattle. “The FBI appreciates the skillful work by our partners, as well as the invaluable assistance of the Royal Bahamas Police Force. If it weren’t for this coordinated effort, and the tips and assistance of private citizens, Harris-Moore might still be at large. I hope this case demonstrates to the public the important contribution they can have in bringing criminals to justice.”
The FBI is the lead federal agency investigating the case. The FBI was assisted by the U.S. Department of Transportation Office of Inspector General, as well as numerous state and local law enforcement agencies from across the country. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Darwin Roberts, Mike Dion and Richard E. Cohen. Attorneys with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of Indiana assisted with the case. County Prosecutors Greg Banks (Island County), Randy Gaylord (San Juan County), Richard Weyrich (Skagit County) and Mark Roe (Snohomish County) have provided remarkable resources and assistance.
For additional information please contact Emily Langlie, Public Affairs Officer for the United States Attorney’s Office, at (206) 553-4110 or Emily.Langlie@USDOJ.Gov.
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Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Comments Off on Camano Island Man Pleads Guilty to Multi-State Crime Spree Colton Harris-Moore Pleads Guilty and Forfeits Any Proceeds from His Story

Individual Detained in Incident Near Pentagon

Yonathan Melaku, 22, of Alexandria, VA., was detained this morning for trespass after he was seen in Arlington National Cemetery at a time when the cemetery was closed. Initial contact with Melaku found he was carrying items which caused initial concerns about the public’s safety, prompting the FBI and other agencies to respond to the scene and roads around the Pentagon to be shut down.The FBI’s Washington Field Office, United States Park Police, Pentagon Force Protection Agency, Ft. Myer Police, Arlington County Police Department and Arlington County Fire Department were involved in the investigation, which initiated on the grounds adjacent and West of the Pentagon.Melaku was initially observed in the early morning hours inside the grounds of Arlington National Cemetery. Ft. Myer Police detained him. United States Park Police questioned Melaku and initial investigative efforts quickly identified two potential public safety concerns, items in Melaku’s possession as well as a red 2011 Nissan vehicle found parked in a wooded area nearby the Pentagon directly off Route 27 and Route 110.Arlington County Fire Department and an initial FBI search of the vehicle found no immediate threat. The FBI removed the vehicle from the scene and further processing of the vehicle is underway.Melaku also was in possession of a backpack that contained unknown materials which initially caused public safety concerns. Bomb experts at the scene, however, were able to determine that the items were non-explosive and inert. The materials in the backpack will undergo further testing at the FBI Laboratory in Quantico, VA.As part of the investigation, Melaku’s residence in Alexandria, VA was searched by the FBI with the assistance of Fairfax County Police Department.At this time, law enforcement believes Melaku acted alone and that there were no other locations or activity involved.The United States Marine Corps reports that Melaku joined the Marine Corps Reserve on Sept. 4, 2007 and is currently listed as a Marine Corps reservist Lance Cpl and a motor vehicle operator with Combat Engineer Support Company, 4th Combat Engineer Battalion, 4th Marine Division, Marine Forces Reserve. He has previously been awarded the National Defense Service Medal and the Selected Marine Corps Reserve Medal. He has not deployed overseas.Melaku currently remains in the custody of the United States Park Police.The FBI’s Washington Field Office Joint Terrorism Task Force (WFO JTTF) provides critical incident response in the National Capital Region for both federal investigations and the request of any law enforcement agency. United States Park Police, Arlington County Police Department, Pentagon Force Protection Agency, Fairfax County Police Department are each represented on the WFO’s JTTF.

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Fifth Member of CD and DVD Counterfeiting Ring in Atlanta Sentenced to Prison

ATLANTA, GA—IBRAHIM DIALLO, 27, of Atlanta, was sentenced by United States District Judge William S. Duffey Jr., for his involvement in a counterfeit DVD and CD ring.
United States Attorney Sally Quillian Yates said, “The victims in this case are the thousands of Americans who earn their livelihoods from the legitimate creation and performance of popular music and movies.This group of defendants stole from them by mass-producing counterfeit music CDs and DVD movies in a pirating operation that may have been the largest of its kind in the Southeastern United States.”
In Washington, D.C. Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer said, “Mr. Diallo and his co-conspirators trafficked in counterfeit CDs and DVDs that would have been worth millions of dollars on the open market, to the detriment of artists, retailers, producers and others. The Justice Department has never been more committed than it is today to investigating and prosecuting these crimes, and this case exemplifies our determination to make sure that counterfeiters and other intellectual property criminals are appropriately punished.”
“The creation, smuggling and sale of counterfeit goods are not victimless crimes,” said Atlanta Special Agent in Charge of ICE HSI Brock Nicholson. “Products that are produced and sold illegally do harm to trademark holders, may be smuggled into the country and distributed by organized crime groups and then sold to the detriment of local businesses and communities who derive no financial gain from the illegal sales. ICE HSI is committed to an aggressive approach towards enforcing the nation’s intellectual property rights laws.”
DIALLO was sentenced to three years, 2 months in federal prison, to be followed by three years of supervised release, and ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $3,867.
According to United States Attorney Yates and the information in court: DIALLO pleaded guilty on Sept. 1, 2009, to one count of conspiracy to commit criminal copyright infringement, to traffic in counterfeit goods and to traffic in counterfeit labels. At his plea hearing, DIALLO admitted that he sold pirated CDs and DVDs along with counterfeit labels and packaging. DIALLO admitted to selling, and conspiring to sell, thousands of pirated CDs and DVDs per week. DIALLO was one of 13 individuals charged in a May 19, 2009, indictment alleging various copyright, trademark and counterfeit goods offenses. In February 2011, four of DIALLO’s co-conspirators were sentenced for their involvement in the piracy ring:
  • MAMADOU SADIO BARRY, 40, was sentenced to five years in prison;
  • MOUSSA BARADJI, 29, was sentenced to four years, two months in prison;
  • SEDIKEY SANKANO, 42, was sentenced to two years in prison;
  • WON AHN, 69, was placed on probation for one year.
BARRY, BARADJI and NKANO also were ordered to serve three years of supervised release following their prison terms. BARRY AND BARADJI were ordered to pay $70,894 in restitution and SANKANO was ordered to pay $3,867 in restitution. The court found that these defendants were responsible for distributing illegal copies of products that, if legitimate, would have been valued at more than $2 million.
The sentence announced today is an example of efforts being undertaken by the Department of Justice Task Force on Intellectual Property (IP Task Force). Attorney General Eric Holder created the IP Task Force to combat the growing number of domestic and international intellectual property crimes, protect the health and safety of American consumers, and safeguard the nation’s economic security against those who seek to profit illegally from American creativity, innovation and hard work. The IP Task Force seeks to strengthen intellectual property rights protection through heightened criminal and civil enforcement, greater coordination among federal, state and local law enforcement partners, and increased focus on international enforcement efforts, including reinforcing relationships with key foreign partners and U.S. industry leaders. To learn more about the IP Task Force, go to www.justice.gov/dag/iptaskforce.
The case was investigated by special agents of the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, together with officers of the Atlanta Police Department Organized Crime Unit; the College Park, Ga., Police Department; and the East Point, Ga., Police Department. Assistance was provided by the Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America.
This case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Brian Pearce in the Northern District of Georgia and Senior Counsel John H. Zacharia of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section.
For further information please contact Sally Quillian Yates, United States Attorney, or Charysse L. Alexander, Executive Assistant United States Attorney, through Patrick Crosby, Public Affairs Officer, U.S. Attorney’s Office, at (404) 581-6016. The Internet address for the HomePage for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia is www.usdoj.gov/usao/gan.
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Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | 3 Comments

resident and Chief Operating Officer of Money Service Company Sentenced in Manhattan Federal Court to 11 and 5 Years in Prison, Respectively, for Roles in Defrauding Banks, Retailers, Hospitals, and Universities Out of Over $60 Million

PREET BHARARA, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, JANICE K. FEDARCYK, the Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), and CHRISTY L. ROMERO, the Acting Special Inspector General for the Troubled Asset Relief Program (“SIGTARP”), announced that ROBERT EGAN, the President of Mount Vernon Money Center (“;MVMC”), and BERNARD McGARRY, the Chief Operating Officer of MVMC were sentenced today in Manhattan federal court to 11 and 5 years in prison for their roles in defrauding MVMC clients, including banks that had received TARP funds, universities, and hospitals, out of over $60 million that had been entrusted to MVMC. EGAN, 65, of Bedford Corners, New York, and McGARRY, 51, of Yonkers, New York, both previously pled guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit bank and wire fraud and six counts of bank fraud before U.S. District Judge JOHN F. KEENAN who imposed today’s sentences.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney PREET BHARARA stated: “Robert Egan and Bernard McGarry used the Mount Vernon Money Center vaults, containing tens of millions of dollars of other people’s money they had pledged to safeguard, as their own personal ATM machines. The stiff punishments imposed on them today should send a clear message to banking professionals thinking about violating the trust of their clients: we will uncover your fraud and we will send you to jail. I applaud our partners, the FBI and SIGTARP, for their extraordinary efforts in uncovering this complex and brazen fraud.”
FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge JANICE K. FEDARCYK stated: “Egan and McGarry engaged in a long-term scheme to misuse customers’ money and engaged in repeated deception to conceal their theft. Essentially, they stole customers’ money and lied to cover it up. These were clear violations of their professional responsibilities, and the sentences handed down reflect this.”
SIGTARP Acting Special Inspector General CHRISTY L. ROMERO stated: “The American taxpayers became shareholders in hundreds of banks that received TARP funds. SIGTARP is committed to protecting the taxpayers’ investment. Egan and McGarry defrauded TARP recipient banks. As the court stated today, this was simply a case of robbing Peter to pay Paul. Today’s sentencings of 11 years imprisonment for Egan and 5 years imprisonment for McGarry make clear that criminals who defraud TARP recipients will pay for their crimes. SIGTARP will continue to work tirelessly with the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and its other law enforcement partners to ensure that those who fraudulently put taxpayer money at risk will be brought to justice.”
According to the Indictment and statements made during various proceedings in this case:
MVMC engaged in various cash management businesses, including replenishing cash in over 5,300 Automated Teller Machines (“ATMs”) owned by banks and other financial institutions. In addition, the company provided armored car services to banks, financial institutions, and retailers, through a subsidiary called Armored Money Services (“AMS”). MVMC also provided payroll services to various employers, including hospitals and universities, which permitted employees to cash their paychecks on their employers’ premises. In connection with these businesses, MVMC owned and operated several cash vaults, in which MVMC and its affiliated businesses stored and processed cash collected from and distributed to its clients, and other cash depositories such as the Federal Reserve Bank.
From at least 2005 through February 2010, EGAN and McGARRY solicited and collected hundreds of millions of dollars from the company’s clients, based in part on the representations that they would not commingle clients’ funds or use the funds for purposes other than those specified in the various contracts between MVMC and its clients. In fact, these representations were false, and EGAN and McGARRY misappropriated tens of millions of dollars of MVMC’s clients’ funds.
The defendants engaged in a practice known as “playing the float.” More specifically, MVMC was entrusted on a weekly basis to hold tens of millions of dollars for its clients for specific business purposes for a specified period of time. Relying upon the continual influx of funds, EGAN and McGARRY misappropriated the clients’ funds for their and MVMC’s own use, to cover operating expenses of the MVMC operating entities, to repay prior obligations to clients, or for their own personal enrichment.
The defendants’ scheme involved outright deception. For example, when bank customers did audits of MVMC’s vaults to ensure that their money was properly segregated and safeguarded by the company, McGARRY, at EGAN’s direction, moved the money around inside the vault in advance of the customer’s inspection, so as to make it appear that MVMC was properly maintaining the customers’ funds when it was not. In so doing, the defendants concealed from customers the fact that their money was being used to fund MVMC’s operating shortfalls and to enrich the defendants at the customers’ expense.
As a result of the fraudulent commingling and misappropriation of customer funds described above, in February 2010, though MVMC had been entrusted with over $85 million by its clients, it only held approximately $25 million in cash in its vaults and bank accounts.
During his guilty plea, EGAN admitted that he had engaged in “deceptive” practices with respect to MVMC’s customers, and admitted to misusing and commingling MVMC client funds, in violation of MVMC’s obligations to its customers. McGARRY also admitted that he and EGAN “played the float” and that they used customer money to cover operating shortfalls in the businesses, in violation of contractual obligations to keep their customers’ money segregated.
In addition to the prison terms, Judge KEENAN sentenced both EGAN and McGARRY to three years of supervised release. For each defendant, he also imposed an order of forfeiture in the amount of $70 million and a $700 special assessment. Restitution orders will be determined at a later date.
Mr. BHARARA praised the investigative work of the FBI and SIGTARP.
This case was brought in coordination with President BARACK OBAMA’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, on which Mr. BHARARA serves as Co-Chair of the Securities and Commodities Fraud Working Group and Mr. BAROFSKY serves as Co-Chair of the Rescue Fraud Working Group. President OBAMA established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.
If you believe you were a victim of this crime, including a victim entitled to restitution, and you wish to provide information to law enforcement and/or receive notice of future developments in the case or additional information, please contact Wendy Olsen-Clancy, the Victim Witness Coordinator at the United States Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York, at (866) 874-8900 or Wendy.Olsen@usdoj.gov. For additional information, go to: http://www.usdoj.gov/usao/nys/victimwitness.html on the Internet.
This matter is being handled by the Office’s Complex Frauds Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorneys ANTONIA M. APPS and DAVID MILLER are in charge of the prosecution.
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Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Comments Off on resident and Chief Operating Officer of Money Service Company Sentenced in Manhattan Federal Court to 11 and 5 Years in Prison, Respectively, for Roles in Defrauding Banks, Retailers, Hospitals, and Universities Out of Over $60 Million

Jacqueline Lebaron Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Obstruct Religious Beliefs

HOUSTON—Jacqueline Lebaron, 46, the last of several members of the LeBaron family and “Lamb of God” religious sect charged for their involvement in a series of murders in 1988 in Houston and elsewhere, has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to obstruct religious beliefs, United States Attorney José Angel Moreno announced today.
United States District Judge Sim Lake accepted Lebaron’s guilty plea at a hearing this morning and has set sentencing for Sept. 8, 2011.
Originally indicted in 1992, Lebaron had been a fugitive for more than 15 years until she was located in Honduras through the dogged efforts of the FBI. She was arrested in May 2010 after being deported from Honduras to the United States. The defendant’s conviction is based on crimes that occurred in June 1988.
On June 27, 1988, William Heber Lebaron entered a business located at 2102 Blaylock in Houston and shot Mark Chynoweth three times, killing him. At approximately the same time, Richard Lebaron, with the direct assistance of his sibling, Patricia Lebaron, traveled to the 6000 block of Rena Street in Houston where he met with Duane Chynoweth and Duane’s eight-year-old daughter, Jenny Chynoweth. During the course of this meeting, Richard Lebaron shot and killed both Duane and Jenny Chynoweth. At approximately the same time, Douglas Barlow entered an appliance business located in Irving, Texas, where he shot Edward Marston, who subsequently died of those injuries approximately four hours later. The victims had been ordered murdered by Aaron Lebaron, the leader of the Lebaron family, because they had left the religious cult. William, Patricia and Richard Lebaron and Douglas Barlow have all been convicted and have or are presently serving prison sentences.
Jacqueline Lebaron assisted in the conspiracy by providing financial support to her siblings participating in the murders by providing them travel money. The conspiracy conviction carries a maximum sentence of five years’ incarceration and a maximum fine of $10,000. There is no parole in the federal system. Jacqueline Lebaron will remain in custody of the United States without bond pending her sentencing hearing.
The case was investigated by the special agents with the Houston Police Department and the FBI and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Ted Imperato and Richard D. Hanes.
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Jury Imposes Death Sentence Against Bridgeport Drug Dealer for Murdering Three People in 2005

David B. Fein, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, and Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, announced that a federal jury in New Haven today voted unanimously to impose the federal death penalty against AZIBO AQUART, 30, of Bridgeport, for murdering three Bridgeport residents on August 24, 2005.
“We thank the jury for their diligent and attentive service over both the guilt and sentencing phases of this case,” stated U.S. Attorney Fein. “They have made a significant sacrifice from their daily lives as they fulfilled an important duty of citizens of our country.”
On May 23, 2011, after a month-long trial, the jury found AQUART guilty of the murders of Tina Johnson, 43, James Reid, 40, and Basil Williams, 54. According to the evidence disclosed during the trial, AQUART, also known as “Azibo Smith,” “Azibo Siwatu Jahi Smith,” “D,” “Dreddy,” and “Jumbo,” was the founder and leader of a drug trafficking group that primarily sold crack cocaine out of an apartment building located at 215 Charles Street in Bridgeport. AQUART and his associates participated in acts of violence, such as threats and assaults, to maintain their control over the group’s drug distribution activities at the Charles Street Apartments. In the summer of 2005, AQUART and his associates became involved in a drug trafficking dispute with Tina Johnson, a resident of 215 Charles Street who sometimes sold smaller quantities of crack cocaine without the approval of AQUART. On the morning of August 24, 2005, AQUART and others entered Johnson’s apartment, bound Johnson, her boyfriend James Reid and friend Basil Williams with duct tape, and brutally beat the victims to death with baseball bats. AQUART and others then drilled the front door of the apartment shut from the inside.
In addition to witness testimony, the government offered extensive forensic evidence gathered from Johnson’s apartment, including fingerprints and evidence that contained DNA from AQUART and his co-conspirators. AQUART’s fingerprint was found on a piece of duct tape recovered from the crime scene.
AQUART was found guilty of conspiring to commit murder in aid of racketeering and committing the racketeering murders of Johnson, Reid and Williams. The jury also found AQUART guilty of committing three counts of drug-related murder. Finally, AQUART was found guilty of one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute 50 grams or more of cocaine base (“crack cocaine”).
Today, the jury unanimously determined that AQUART should be sentenced to death for committing both the racketeering murders and drug-related murders of Johnson and Williams, but could not reach a unanimous decision as to an appropriate penalty, life imprisonment or death, for the racketeering murder and drug-related murder of Reid.
This is the first time since the federal death penalty was reinstituted in 1988 that a federal jury in Connecticut has found that a defendant should be sentenced to death. United States District Judge Janet Bond Arterton will schedule a sentencing date after the submission of post-trial motions.
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Bridgeport Police Department, Connecticut State Police, Connecticut Department of Correction’s Intelligence Unit, ICE Homeland Security Investigations, United States Marshals Service, Bridgeport States Attorney’s Office and U.S. Attorney’s Office.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Tracy L. Dayton, Peter D. Markle, Alina P. Reynolds of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Connecticut, and Trial Attorney Jacabed Rodriguez-Coss of the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division, Capital Case Unit.
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