Colorado Man Sentenced to 20 Years for Robbing the Same Montgomery Bank Twice

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: Colorado Man Sentenced to 20 Years for Robbing the Same Montgomery Bank Twice

       Montgomery, Alabama – Richard Allen Evans (50), of Arvada, Colorado, was sentenced yesterday to 240 months in federal prison for bank robbery, announced Louis V. Franklin, Sr., United States Attorney for the Middle District of Alabama.  In addition to 20 years in prison, Evans is subject to 3 years of supervised release once he completes his sentence.  There is no parole in the federal system.

       In June of 2017, Evans entered the BBVA Compass Bank near Eastdale Mall in Montgomery, Alabama.  He approached a bank teller and repeatedly demanded that she turn over all of the money in her bank drawer.  The teller complied out of fear for her life and Evans got away with more than $1,900 in cash.  He then fled to Florida where he was arrested the following day.

       Court records indicate that this was the second time Evans robbed the bank.  Approximately ten years ago, Evans was convicted of robbing the same bank along with six other banks.  He was ordered to serve 125 months in prison and was released when his sentence was complete.   Evans was still on supervised release for those prior convictions at the time he committed the June 2017 bank robbery. 

       “A twenty-year sentence is the maximum allowed by statute for this crime,” stated U.S Attorney Franklin.  “This case is a statement of the excellent work law enforcement does to protect our communities and my office will continue to prosecute these violent offenders to the fullest extent of the law.” 

       FBI Acting Special Agent in Charge Bret Kirby stated, “These types of cases are a prime example of the good work that is done every day in this country by our agents as well as our state and local partners. This type of team work will ensure these repeat offenders will remain incarcerated.” 

       U.S. Attorney Franklin would like to thank the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and the Montgomery Police Department (MPD) for investigating this case.  The Suwanee County Sheriff’s Office (Florida) and the U.S. Marshals Service assisted with this investigation.  Assistant United States Attorney Bradley Bodiford prosecuted the case.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Barry A. Nigro Delivers Remarks at the Annual Antitrust Law Leaders Forum in Miami, Florida

Source: United States Department of Justice

Headline: Deputy Assistant Attorney General Barry A. Nigro Delivers Remarks at the Annual Antitrust Law Leaders Forum in Miami, Florida

A Partnership to Promote and Protect Competition for the Benefit of Consumers

Thank you very much for the kind introduction, and to GCR for hosting this wonderful event.  It is an honor to speak to such an impressive group here in Miami.  This is an exciting time to be at the Antitrust Division.  We have had four agency heads in 12 months, and are happy to now have Assistant Attorney General Delrahim in his office.  While the news is inundated with a variety of proposals for antitrust reform, I am struck by how the Department’s approach to antitrust enforcement has remained steady, consistently focused on promoting and protecting competition for the benefit of consumers.

For example, I recently read a speech that Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy delivered in November 1961 before the Economic Club of New York on the topic of antitrust enforcement.  RFK delivered the speech at the height of the Cold War, when Nikita Khrushchev was plotting to test RFK’s brother, President John F. Kennedy, during his first year in office.  RFK warned that the Soviet Union “opposes us on every front,” including the battle for economic growth.  RFK, the chief law enforcement officer of the United States, told the audience that in the face of the Soviet threat, “I believe we can proceed as partners—united in a national purpose,” going on to say that “in this long and critical struggle, the American system of free enterprise must be our major weapon.”  RFK explained that the partnership between law enforcement and business is crucial in the area of antitrust, the goal of which is to “protect and promote the competitive interests of business—small and large—as well as to protect the public.”

While RFK’s words were spoken more than 50 years ago, they still ring true.  The Antitrust Division still shares a common goal with the business community of promoting and protecting competition for the benefit of consumers.  The Division fulfills its mission by bringing law enforcement actions against activities that threaten the free market.  And, it seeks to respect the American system of free enterprise by allowing competition to flourish.  I want to talk about how the Antitrust Division can be more effective at accomplishing these goals during the merger review process if the parties appearing before us understand that our interests and their interests often align.  Cooperation between the parties and enforcers or “partnership”—to use RFK’s word—can be effective in ensuring both that procompetitive transactions are promptly approved and that consumers do not suffer the risk of harm from anticompetitive transactions.

Importantly, the Division’s commitment to promote and protect competition for the benefit of consumers means that we should not be a roadblock to transactions that are procompetitive.  Most transactions do not raise competitive concerns.  For example, last year the Antitrust Division opened an investigation into only 2.7% of proposed transactions, and issued second requests in only 1.6% of proposed transactions.  To be sure, we have a responsibility to conduct a full and thorough review of a transaction during the HSR process, and we should not clear transactions during the initial waiting period if they raise a competitive problem and more information is needed—we want to be confident that harm to consumers will not result.  At the same time, we do not want to unnecessarily prolong our review where harm is unlikely to occur. Prolonging the review of procompetitive or competitively neutral transactions does not help, but hurts, American consumers. 

As my colleague, Deputy Assistant Attorney General Kempf, explained in a speech this past November, shortening our review of transactions “furthers the Antitrust Division’s mission, which is to promote competition.”  The Division shares Deputy Kempf’s ambition to cut the length of our investigations, because when a transaction is procompetitive, not only do consumers benefit, but the interests of the Division and the parties in avoiding a prolonged review ought to be aligned.  To that end, we are considering ways that we can improve our internal review processes at both the staff and front office level.

We have a long way to go.  Last month, a report was released showing that the duration of the DOJ’s and FTC’s merger reviews increased from 2016 to 2017.  We also see this trend, which appears to be based to some extent on the increasing number of multinational deals and extended time frame of many of our international counterparts.  This is a trend we need to reverse, but the Antitrust Division cannot do it alone.

Most importantly, we need the help of the parties—early and often—to undertake a proper analysis before concluding that any possible anticompetitive concerns are unfounded.  Going into any HSR review, the parties have an enormous information advantage.  They can capitalize on this advantage to the benefit of their shareholders and consumers by being more proactive during the initial waiting period.  

How can the parties “win” at this stage and persuade the Division to clear the transaction rather than issuing a second request?  I like to analogize the initial review period to the pleading stage in civil litigation, and the parties’ advocacy during that period to a 12(b)(6) motion, or perhaps an early summary judgment motion, that can dispose of a case without the need for extensive discovery.

My first suggestion is: don’t always rush your HSR filing.  The public announcement of a transaction, or the terms of the transaction agreement, can create pressure to expedite the HSR filing in the hope that the sooner the antitrust review process starts, the sooner it will end.  That logic is not always the case, however, if the rush to a judgment results in a second request that otherwise could have been avoided.  If you believe you have a strong argument that a second request is unnecessary, and that with more than the time permitted during the initial waiting period, you can persuade us, then consider deferring your HSR filing and using the time to provide us with arguments, based on facts that we can confirm, why the transaction poses no risk of harm to consumers.  

My second suggestion follows from the first: as soon as possible, give us your strongest arguments for why a more fulsome investigation is not merited.  In the initial waiting period, a high level white paper re-hashing the rationale for the deal and the reasons not to worry often won’t cut it.  Arguments for closing our investigation without a second request should include facts that we can confirm through your document productions and through our own independent investigation and interviews of third parties. Parties should be prepared to provide key information to us within the first few days of their HSR filing, if not before filing, to avoid jamming the staff.  This includes, for example:

  • Names and phone numbers of major customers.
  • Bid data for key transactions.
  • Areas of product overlap.
  • Internal analyses of competitors in areas of product overlap.
  • Business and strategic plans for areas of overlap.
  • Analyses of the proposed transaction conducted internally or by consultants.

It is important to note that we cannot conduct our review effectively during the initial waiting period unless you provide us the information we need early.  Parties too often expect us to work miracles by providing critical information us too late in the process, leaving inadequate time to confirm the facts and vet the arguments.

My third suggestion is: if you decide to pull-and-refile the HSR, actively use the extra time to your benefit.  Too often, parties pull-and-refile because they took a wait and see approach during the initial waiting period and now need to play catch-up.  The result is that we find ourselves in the same position we were in at the end of the initial period—key questions remain unanswered, and the parties rehash their initial pitch while providing little additional evidence.

The bottom line is that the parties’ substantial information advantage is an asset you should exploit from the start to build a compelling “motion to dismiss.”  Unfortunately, parties often wait to make their strongest advocacy pitches and evidentiary submissions too late in the process. They wave their hand like they’re using a Jedi mind trick hoping to convince us there’s nothing to see, even though significant areas of concern are obvious:  “These are not the droids you’re looking for. … Move along, move along.”  Having served in leadership roles at both the FTC’s Bureau of Competition and the Antitrust Division, I can assure you that if there are significant areas of possible anticompetitive harm, we will almost certainly find them.  But we are not, in 30 to 60 days, magically going to get what we need to determine that possible harm to consumers posed by a potentially problematic transaction is unfounded.  You need to get it to us, and we are here to listen.

Though cooperation is important to promptly clearing procompetitive transactions that benefit consumers, it is also critical in effectively remedying anticompetitive transactions.  The question with anticompetitive transactions is whether or how a transaction can be fixed to promote and protect competition for the benefit of consumers.  We take seriously the choice of remedy, because consumers bear the risk of mistakes, and if we get it wrong, the consequences can be irreversible.  Our client is the American consumer, and therefore it is our view, having been presented with an anticompetitive transaction, that the risk of a failed remedy must be borne by the parties, not the consumer.  Any remedy must be complete and effective—or, as the Supreme Court put it, “[t]he relief in an antitrust case must be ‘effective to redress the violations’ and ‘to restore competition.’”  If we cannot reach a solution with the parties that will accomplish these goals, then we are left with no choice but to sue to block.  That includes instances where a transaction may have already cleared HSR.  The lesson of the Parker-Hannifin post-clearance challenge should be that the Division will not look the other way if it determines—even after the HSR waiting period has expired—that the transaction is anticompetitive.

While I have been discussing the importance of cooperation and partnership, in crafting a remedy, the Division and its leadership do not approach their mission as that of a friendly regulator.  To the contrary, as Assistant Attorney General Delrahim has emphasized, antitrust is law enforcement, not regulation.  The Division will therefore continue to favor structural remedies over regulatory, behavioral remedies.  

The imposition of a behavioral remedy inverts the Division’s role into something it is not—the hall monitor for private businesses operating in a free market economy.  Even worse, a behavioral approach raises serious risks of false negatives and false positives.  Antitrust economists and attorneys across the ideological spectrum have recognized that behavioral decrees may simply be ineffective at remedying harm to competition.  As FTC Commissioner Terrell McSweeny explained last year, behavioral relief “at best only delays the merged firm’s exercise of market power.”  In addition, trying to regulate corporate behavior creates challenges monitoring and enforcing compliance.  It should be no surprise that we find ourselves too often in the business of expending scarce taxpayer resources investigating possible violations of regulatory decrees, all aimed at ensuring that consumers do not suffer the harm the decree attempted to regulate away.

Behavioral decrees also can be the source of false positives.  As a tool in our tool kit, it may be tempting for us to impose a behavioral decree where certain aspects of a transaction raise concerns—even if the transaction does not strictly violate Section 7.  That approach is fundamentally flawed.  Unless we conclude that a particular aspect of a transaction would be anticompetitive, we should not impose a “cure” at all.  We are not in the business of prescribing long-term therapeutic relief to a healthy marketplace.  Nor are we part of a cooperative enterprise to enhance our power over industry, particularly when doing so harms our client—the American consumer.  Imposing a regulatory decree where none is merited can threaten to slow innovation and impose unnecessary costs that may be passed on to the public in the form of higher prices or lower quality.

Our responsibility to American consumers obligates us to accept only a complete and effective solution to anticompetitive transactions.  This is why, in addition to the many problems with regulatory decrees, the Division favors structural fixes that promote and protect competition rather than substitute competition with regulation.

I want to be clear what we mean when we refer to structural remedies.  The most effective and complete form of a divestiture is the sale or spin-off of an ongoing or stand-alone business that will create an independent competitor to the merging companies.  Yet, we have witnessed a trend toward the use or proposed use of asset carve outs that attempt to create a stand-alone business from a collection of assets that previously did not function in the form they will take for purposes of the divestiture.  Asset carve-outs put us—just a bunch of government lawyers—in the position of having to guess whether this collection of assets, reconstituted in the hands of a new owner, and often dependent on the old owner and future competitor for critical inputs and support, will promote and protect competition by creating an independent and effective competitor.  These types of proposals are inherently suspect, for several reasons.

First and foremost, we can be confident that a clean divestiture of a stand-alone business, unlike an asset carve-out, in the hands of a qualified divestiture buyer will have the resources it needs to be an independent and effective competitor.  Where courts have analyzed whether a proposed remedy is sufficient—that is, in “litigating the fix” cases—they have been understandably concerned by proposals whose scope would fail to preserve competition.  In United States v. Aetna, for example, Judge Bates rejected the merging parties’ fix because there was persuasive evidence that the divestiture buyer “would struggle to put together a competitive provider network in the available time frame.”  In other words, the goal of a divestiture is not to simply remove the offending combination; rather, it is to promote and protect competition by preserving the status quo competitive dynamic in the market from day one.

In addition, asset carve outs are fraught with execution risk, especially when they involve assets in multiple foreign jurisdictions that require non-antitrust regulatory approvals in order to transfer the business to an independent competitor.  The GE/Baker Hughes merger is illustrative. Last year, General Electric acquired Baker Hughes in a transaction that would have combined two of the leading providers of refinery process chemicals and services in the United States.  In June 2017, the parties and the Division entered into a consent decree that required GE to divest its Water & Process Technologies unit, so that the divested entity would operate as a completely independent, economically viable, and ongoing business concern. Subject to the decree, the parties closed the transaction.  The decree required GE to complete its divestitures within 90 days—that is, in September 2017—so that a global competitor would exist promptly after the close of the transaction.  But as the deadline neared, we learned from the parties that they would not be able to complete the necessary global divestitures until well into 2018 due to various complications related to the regulatory approvals.

Another reason why divestiture of a stand-alone business is preferred is because an asset carve-out does not fully sever the business line’s relationship with the divestiture seller.  When the divested business has an ongoing relationship with its prior owner as a result of various entanglements, it raises a question whether the divestiture will promote and protect competition.  Judge Bates in Aetna identified this risk as well, noting that courts are “skeptical” of divestitures that require a continuing relationship between the seller and the buyer that “leaves the buyer susceptible to the seller’s actions—which are not aligned with ensuring that the buyer is an effective competitor.”

Our skepticism toward less-than-complete divestitures is well-supported by empirical research.  In particular, the FTC’s 2017 Merger Remedies report found that divestiture remedies between 2006 and 2012, by and large, were either “successful” or “qualified successful.”  The report nevertheless identified instances where divestitures did not succeed.  Why did some divestitures succeed while others failed?  The truth lies in the numbers.  As the FTC found, divestitures of “ongoing businesses” had a 100% success rate and 0% failure rate, whereas divestitures of “selected assets” had an estimated 60% success rate, a 10% “qualified success” rate, and a 30% rate of failure.  Parties proposing divestitures would be well-advised to review this study and its proposed best practices.

To be clear, we will not rush our review if doing so risks a less-than-complete remedy that fails to fully promote and protect the competitive status quo from which consumers benefit.  Parties may understandably resist a divestiture, but doing so when it is integral to completely and effectively remedying an anticompetitive transaction places too much risk on the American consumer.

Regardless of the type of remedy, it is important to make it effective and ensure that the government can take the necessary actions to swiftly address a violation.  As Assistant Attorney General Delrahim highlighted last week in a speech before the New York State Bar Association, the Division is including new provisions in its consent decrees designed to improve their effectiveness and the Division’s ability to enforce them and protect competition.

A key provision requires defendants to agree that, in any civil contempt action or similar action brought by the United States, the government may establish the violation and the appropriateness of any remedy by a preponderance of the evidence.  By comparison, the clear-and-convincing standard of proof that applies in the absence of such an agreement compromises the Division’s ability to enforce critical commitments made by the parties to remedy an anticompetitive transaction.  Unfortunately, when the ability to enforce such commitments is limited, it is the consumer who suffers.  The parties’ agreement to a preponderance standard encourages a stronger commitment to compliance and a more cooperative approach to promptly resolving potential violations.

With respect to consent decree duration, the new provisions also embrace a cooperative, carrot-and-stick approach to enforcement. The new decree provisions allow the United States to terminate the decree upon notice to the court and the defendants if it determines that there is no longer a risk of harm—freeing the parties, the court, and the Division from ongoing oversight obligations.  Otherwise, we risk becoming a regulatory agency, and we already have our hands full dealing with over 1000 decrees, some more 100 years old, all of which we are currently reviewing.  On the other hand, the new provisions permit the United States to apply to the court for an extension of the decree’s term if a court finds the parties have been out of compliance with its requirements.

Finally, the new decree provisions ensure that the parties bear the cost of enforcement actions.  They require defendants to agree to reimburse the taxpayers for attorneys’ fees, expert fees, and costs incurred in connection with any consent decree enforcement effort. 

This past December, in the week before Christmas, the Defense, Industrials, and Aerospace Section of the Antitrust Division filed settlements resolving its prosecutions against three unlawful mergers—Vulcan/Aggregates USA, Transdigm/Takata, and Parker-Hannifin.  Each decree required divestitures instead of behavioral conditions, and each included these provisions.  The Division will continue to insist that these terms be included in future merger and civil non-merger settlements as a way to promote and protect competition and avoid the harm to consumers that results from anticompetitive transactions and ineffective decree enforcement.

To sum up, we should not lose sight of the fact that the ultimate goal of the antitrust laws—to protect competition—benefits private enterprise and American consumers alike.  RFK had the wisdom to recognize the unique role antitrust law plays in our free market system, and that it can only fulfill its promise through vigorous law enforcement.  At the Antitrust Division, we hope to carry that mantle, and in partnership with private industry, to promote and protect competition for the benefit of consumers.

Croydon man jailed for rape

Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

Headline: Croydon man jailed for rape

A man has been jailed for 17 years for rape.

Darrel Rose, 31, (6.7.86) of King Henry’s Drive, New Addington was found guilty on 31 July 2017 at Croydon Crown Court of two counts of rape, one count of assault by penetration and two counts of assault causing actual bodily harm.

He was sentenced on Friday, 2 February, to a total of 17 years’ imprisonment.

The victim was a woman who had been known to Rose for more than ten years.

On 25 March 2017, police were called to a newsagent in Hackbridge by a female victim who stated that she had been raped at a house nearby. The victim had only been able to make her escape, wearing her dressing gown and slippers, after Rose had fallen asleep.

DC Ellen Jones of the Met’s Child Abuse and Sexual Offences Command said:

“The victim in this case has shown great bravery and courage in standing up to Rose and ensuring that he is made to answer for his actions.

“I would like to praise the strength and commitment she has shown throughout this case.”

Teenagers jailed for manslaughter

Source: United Kingdom London Metropolitan Police

Headline: Teenagers jailed for manslaughter

Two teenagers who stabbed a man to death in an unprovoked attack have been jailed.

Felou Abadja, 19 (22.02.98), of Pinnell Road, SE9, and Dval Doh, 16 (18.08.01) of Floyd Road, SE7 were sentenced at the Old Bailey on Friday 2 February.

Abadja was sentenced to 18 years’ imprisonment with an extended licence of four years. Doh was sentenced to 12 years’ imprisonment with an extended licence of four years.

They were both found guilty of manslaughter and possession of an offensive weapon at the Old Bailey on 21 December 2017 following a trial.

Abadja previously pleaded guilty to possession of a Class A drug (cocaine). Doh had previously pleaded guilty to possession of a knife and possession of a Class A drug (heroin).

On 13 June 2017, police were called by the London Ambulance Service at about 17:45hrs to reports of a man stabbed behind Phipps House, off Woolwich Road, SE7.

Officers and London’s Air Ambulance attended and found 30-year-old Adam Chambers injured. He was pronounced dead at the scene at 18:27hrs.

A post-mortem examination held the following day gave cause of death as a stab wound to the chest.

The court heard that on the afternoon of 13 June, Abadja, Doh and a 15-year-old girl were at an address in Lee High Road, recording rap music.

At about 17:00hrs, Abadja called a taxi and asked to be taken to Troughton Road – which is very close to where Adam was fatally stabbed.

The three got in the taxi and they were driven to Troughton Road. Abadja and Doh got out of the taxi, and the driver and the girl waited. The two youths walked to nearby Phipps House and waited in the area next to Hartwell House.

At about 17:35hrs Adam left his home address on his moped and rode to the area of Phipps House, arriving at 17:42hrs when he met Abadja and Doh.

The court heard that Abadja had arranged to meet Adam through a third party to purchase drugs.

Just ten seconds later, the moped was seen to leave the area.

During those ten seconds, Adam was stabbed. He managed to drive a very short distance before collapsing. He was found by a passer-by who called the emergency services.

Abadja and Doh fled to the waiting taxi. The driver noted that they seemed in a hurry, saying ‘let’s go boss”. They also switched their destination to Blackwall Lane and they were dropped off by some flats.

Officers carried out enquiries and Abadja was identified as a suspect.

Abadja was located on 18 June 2017 at an address in Pinnell Road, SE9, after officers forced entry into the property – he was arrested and found to be in possession of a wrap of cocaine. Once at the police station, Abadja tested positive for the drug.

Abadja initially went no comment during interview, but later produced a prepared statement. He placed himself at the scene but said it was the male he was with, Doh, who became involved in a fight with Adam. Abadja told officers he was talking to his regular cannabis dealer when the stabbing took place, and he was some distance away. He said he saw Doh produce a knife and stab the victim. He also told officers he did not know this was going to happen.

However, Abadja was charged with murder and possession of a Class A drug (cocaine) in the early hours of 20 June 2017.

Doh, who was aged 15 at the time, was arrested on 21 June 2017. He was found to be in possession of a large knife and four wraps of heroin. He answered ‘no comment’ to all the questions put to him in interview.

The knife was analysed by an expert who concluded the knife found in Doh’s possession was the same one that fatally stabbed Adam. Traces of Adam’s blood were found inside the bag Doh was wearing upon his arrest.

He was charged on 22 June 2017 with murder, possession of a knife and possession of a Class A drug (heroin).

Detective Superintendent Lee Watling, who led the investigation, said: “This was a vicious unprovoked attack on the victim who was unable to defend himself.

“I hope today’s sentencing gives Adam’s family some measure of closure and comfort.”

Nine Indicted by Federal Grand Jury for Multiple Violent Robberies in North Texas

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: Nine Indicted by Federal Grand Jury for Multiple Violent Robberies in North Texas

DALLAS — A federal grand jury returned an indictment last week charging nine Houston residents with offenses related to eight violent robberies in North Texas, announced U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox of the Northern District of Texas. 

Specifically, the nine-count indictment, unsealed yesterday afternoon, charges, Jarvis Broussard, aka “Koppo,” 29; Trey Nathaniel Dickerson, 25; Christian Demond Gilbert, aka “Go Getta,” 28; Randy Lamark Hammond, 23; John Christopher Jones, aka “2tall,” 27; Brandon Chermaine Mallet, aka “Wookie,” 31; Chrisheena Ladale Milburn, aka “Beanz,” 27; Fernando Rafael Taylor, 29; and Jonathan Walker, aka “Johnathan Walker,” 31, with one count each of conspiracy to interfere with commerce by robbery and at least one additional count of interference with commerce by robbery.

The defendants were arrested today and will remain in custody pending their initial appearances.

The indictment arises out of a series of “jugging” offenses in the Dallas area.  “Jugging” is a term informally used to refer to crimes that involve surveilling banks for potential targets suspected of having significant sums of cash and following the targeted victims to other locations where they are robbed.  The indictment alleges that, on February 4, 2016 and continuing until at least July 22, 2017, the defendants conspired together to commit several robberies to obtain U.S. currency.  The defendants discussed and planned the surveillance and selection of individuals for robbery; the acquisition of property for use in committing robbery; the timing and means of transportation to commit   robbery; the roles of participants during the preparation for and commission of robbery; the division of proceeds obtained from robbery; and plans to avoid detection and apprehension by law enforcement.

A federal indictment is an accusation by a grand jury.  A defendant is entitled to the presumption of innocence unless proven guilty.  If convicted, however, the defendants’ sentences will be determined by the court after a review of the federal sentencing guidelines and factors unique to the case, including the defendant’s prior criminal record (if any), the defendant’s role in the offense and the characteristics of the violation.   

The investigation is being conducted by the FBI, with assistance from the Dallas, Garland, Irving, and Richardson Police Departments.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brian McKay and Sid Mody are in charge of the prosecution.

# # #

Lubbock Man Involved in Furanyl Fentanyl Distribution Conspiracy Pleads Guilty to Federal Drug Charge

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: Lubbock Man Involved in Furanyl Fentanyl Distribution Conspiracy Pleads Guilty to Federal Drug Charge

LUBBOCK, Texas — A Lubbock, Texas, man, Steven Lawrence Forcum, 32, appeared yesterday before U.S. Magistrate Judge D. Gordon Bryant Jr. and pleaded guilty to a federal offense stemming from his role in a large-scale furanyl fentanyl distribution conspiracy, announced U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox of the Northern District of Texas.

Forcum pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute and possess with intent to distribute furanyl fentanyl.  He faces a statutory penalty of not more than twenty years in federal prison and a $1 million fine.  Judge Bryant recommended that the district court accept Forcum’s guilty plea.

Co-defendants, Krisandrea Monee Dobbs, 31; Peyton Cleveland Wilson, 27; and Ashlyn Paige Utley, 23, previously pleaded guilty to their role in the conspiracy and are awaiting sentencing.

Law enforcement first learned of Forcum’s involvement in distributing the potent synthetic opioid when Forcum voluntarily made a police report that someone had stolen his supply of fentanyl. 

According to the plea agreement factual resume in Forcum’s case, between 2015 and October 2016, Forcum used his email account to contact numerous international companies to purchase large quantities of furanyl fentanyl and other controlled substances.  In corresponding with these international companies, Forcum would boast that he sells a kilogram of furanyl fentanyl every two months.  He also bragged that fentanyl and synthetic fentanyl were his “hottest sellers for years.”  Forcum admitted that he routinely supplied Wilson and Dobbs with furanyl fentanyl for distribution in the Lubbock, Texas, area. 

Fentanyl is a potent synthetic opioid analgesic that is about 30 to 40 times stronger than heroin and up to 100 times more powerful than morphine.  Besides analgesia, Fentanyl produces a variety of pharmacological effects, including alteration in mood, euphoria, drowsiness, respiratory depression, suppression of cough reflex, constriction of pupils, and impaired gastrointestinal mobility.  Fentanyl is a Schedule II controlled substance.  Fentanyl is potentially lethal, even at very low levels.  Ingestion of small dosages—the equivalent of a grain of salt—can be fatal.  Fentanyl can also be absorbed through the skin and accidental inhalation of airborne powder can occur.

Furanyl Fentanyl is a controlled substance analogue that has a chemical structure substantially similar to Fentanyl, a Schedule II controlled substance under the Controlled Substances Act, and has a stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central nervous system that is substantially similar to or greater than the stimulant, depressant, or hallucinogenic effect on the central nervous system of Fentanyl, a Schedule II controlled substance.

The Drug Enforcement Administration and the Lubbock Police Department are in charge of the investigation.

Assistant United States Attorney Russell Lorfing is in charge of the prosecution.

# # #

Former CPA Sentenced for Obstructing the IRS

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: Former CPA Sentenced for Obstructing the IRS

St. Louis, MO – Mark A. Beckham was sentenced today to 36 months in prison for obstructing the administration of the internal revenue laws.

Beckham, 62, St. Charles County, was found guilty in September 2017 of one felony count of attempting to interfere with the administration of the internal revenue laws. The six-day trial was held before United States District Judge Ronnie L. White.

Beckham was a former CPA, whose license to practice as a CPA was revoked following his federal mail fraud conviction in 2006.

The evidence at trial showed that Beckham prepared 2009 and 2010 individual and corporate federal income tax returns for a client. These returns were subsequently audited by the IRS. During this audit, Beckham provided his client’s dayplanner calendar to the IRS. This dayplanner calendar had been altered to reflect that Beckham’s client worked for a company that had large tax losses, when, in fact, Beckham’s client had not worked for this company. This dayplanner calendar was given to the IRS to support deductions for non-passive losses on the tax returns that Beckham prepared for his client.

This case was investigated by IRS-Criminal Investigation. Assistant United States Attorneys Steven Muchnick and Reginald Harris are handling the case for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Independence Man Sentenced to 15 Years for Meth Conspiracy

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: Independence Man Sentenced to 15 Years for Meth Conspiracy

KANSAS CITY, Mo. – Timothy A. Garrison, United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced today that an Independence, Mo., man was among four area residents sentenced in federal court for their roles in a conspiracy to distribute methamphetamine.

William D. Whitehurst, 54, of Independence, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Brian C. Wimes on Thursday, Feb. 1, 2018, to 15 years in federal prison without parole.

Co-defendants John D. Grandon, 47, of Independence, his sister, Regina R. Williamson, 54, of Kansas City, Mo., and James P. Earl, 48, of Blue Springs, Mo., were also sentenced yesterday. Grandon was sentenced to 10 years in federal prison without parole. Williamson was sentenced to two years and six months in federal prison without parole. Earl was sentenced to four years and six months in federal prison without parole.

Whitehurst, Grandon, Williamson and Earl each pleaded guilty to their roles in a drug-trafficking conspiracy that ran from Nov. 1, 2013, to Sept. 24, 2014. Grandon also pleaded guilty to possessing a firearm in furtherance of a drug-trafficking crime.

Whitehurst and Earl each admitted that he purchased methamphetamine from co-defendant Melanie C. Hamilton, 45, of Independence. They then redistributed that methamphetamine to Grandon, Williamson and others.

Grandon admitted that he is individually responsible for the purchase and redistribution of at least 1.5 kilograms of methamphetamine. A confidential informant told investigators that he had seen Grandon at his residence with half a pound of methamphetamine and a gun. Law enforcement officers executed a search warrant at Grandon’s residence on July 1, 2014, and found approximately 160 grams of methamphetamine, a Smith and Wesson .380-caliber revolver, $2,944 and numerous items of drug paraphernalia. Grandon told investigators that he had purchased approximately half a pound of methamphetamine each week from Whitehurst over the past three months (approximately 2.7 kilograms).

Williamson admitted to selling approximately three to four ounces of methamphetamine per week at $1,000 per ounce for approximately two months (approximately 792 grams of methamphetamine). Williamson sold methamphetamine to her brother Grandon’s customers while he was incarcerated.

Hamilton pleaded guilty to being the source of supply for the drug-trafficking conspiracy and is scheduled to be sentenced on April 12, 2018. Hamilton admitted that she obtained large quantities of methamphetamine, which she broke down into smaller quantities for redistribution. A confidential informant made three separate controlled purchases from Hamilton; on each occasion she weighed out approximately 8.3 grams of methamphetamine from a large zip-lock freezer bag that contained multiple pounds of methamphetamine.

Law enforcement officers executed a search warrant at Hamilton’s residence on Sept. 24, 2014, and seized more than a kilogram of methamphetamine, a DVR containing video surveillance of individuals coming and going from her residence, and drug paraphernalia. Hamilton told investigators that she had received one to two pounds of methamphetamine from her source every other week over the past three months (1.5 pounds per two weeks, or three pounds per month, totals nine pounds, or 4,086 grams). The totality of the investigation indicates that Hamilton was involved in the distribution of at least five kilograms of methamphetamine.

Five additional co-defendants have also pleaded guilty and been sentenced.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Patrick Edwards. It was investigated by the Jackson County Drug Task Force and the Independence, Mo., Police Department.

South Carolina Man Arraigned on Charge of Mailing Firearms to St. Thomas

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: South Carolina Man Arraigned on Charge of Mailing Firearms to St. Thomas

St. Thomas, USVI – Steven Baxter, 31, of South Carolina, was arraigned Wednesday in District Court on the charge of sending firearms through the mail, United States Attorney Gretchen C.F. Shappert announced. Baxter, who was indicted by a federal grand jury on June 7, 2017, was extradited from South Carolina based on an arrest warrant issued by the District Court the same day. U.S. Magistrate Judge Ruth Miller ordered Baxter detained pending further proceedings.

According to the indictment, on or about March 29, 2017, Baxter caused two firearms to be shipped from South Carolina to a third person in St. Thomas, knowing that the third person was not a licensed firearms dealer. If convicted, Baxter faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

This case is being investigated by Homeland Security Investigations and the United States Postal Inspection Service. It is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Everard E. Potter.

United States Attorney Shappert emphasized that an indictment is merely a formal charging document and is not evidence of guilt. Every defendant is presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty.

Mexican Citizen who was in the U.S. Illegally Sentenced to 210 Months in Federal Prison for His Role in a Methamphetamine Distribution Conspiracy

Source: United States Attorneys General

Headline: Mexican Citizen who was in the U.S. Illegally Sentenced to 210 Months in Federal Prison for His Role in a Methamphetamine Distribution Conspiracy

DALLAS — Rosalio Ramos Tapia, aka “Rosalio Ramos,” “Chale,” and “Mocho,” 43, a citizen of Mexico and in the United States illegally, was sentenced earlier this week before U.S. District Judge David C. Godbey for his role in a methamphetamine distribution conspiracy, announced U.S. Attorney Erin Nealy Cox of the Northern District of Texas.

Tapia was sentenced to 210 months in federal prison following his guilty plea in October 2016 to one count of conspiracy to possess with intent to distribute and to distribute a controlled substance, said substance being 50 grams or more of methamphetamine.  He was in the United States illegally at the time of the offense and will be deported after serving his sentence.  Tapia has been in custody since his arrest in July 2016.

Tapia was charged along with twenty-one others with various offenses related to a methamphetamine distribution conspiracy.  Of the twenty-one charged, fourteen have pleaded guilty, seven have been sentenced and two are awaiting trial. Four defendants remain fugitives.

According to documents filed in the case, between September 25, 2015 through March 18, 2016, Tapia and his coconspirators conspired to distribute methamphetamine and on several occasions, discussed the preparation and conversion of liquid methamphetamine into crystal methamphetamine. 

Specifically, Tapia used coded language to purchase multiple kilograms of methamphetamine so that he could distribute the methamphetamine to other people. Once Tapia sold the kilograms of methamphetamine he provided drug proceeds to the supplier of the methamphetamine.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation investigated, with assistance from the Dallas Police Department and the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigations Division.  Assistant U.S. Attorney George Leal prosecuted.    

 

# # #