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| April 30, 2008 |
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Mexican National Sentenced to 24 Months in Prison for Smuggling Protected Sea Turtles (08-361)
Esteban Lopez Estrada, a Mexican national, was sentenced today in U.S. District
Court in Denver to 24 months in prison for his participation in the sale and
smuggling of sea turtle and other exotic skins and skin products into the United
States from Mexico, the Justice Department announced today. (Read more) |
|
National Security Division Launches New Office of Intelligence (08-360)
Patrick Rowan, Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security, today
announced the formal launch of the Office of Intelligence within the Justice
Department’s National Security Division (NSD). The reorganization creates three
new sections within the Office of Intelligence dedicated to the NSD’s three
primary intelligence related functions – operations, oversight and litigation. (Read more) |
|
Former Grant County, Kentucky Deputy Jailer Pleads Guilty in Civil Rights Case (08-358)
Former Grant County Detention Center (GCDC) Deputy Jailer Jack Powell of
Covington, Ky., pleaded guilty today to conspiring with another former GCDC
employee to obstruct a federal investigation into a civil rights offense,
announced Grace Chung Becker, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Justice
Department’s Civil Rights Division. Powell pleaded guilty in federal court in
Gulfport, Miss. The case had been transferred to the U.S. District Court for the
Southern District of Mississippi on April 14, 2008. (Read more) |
| April 29, 2008 |
|
Corporation Pleads Guilty to Ocean Discharge Violations (08-354)
The National Navigation Company (NNC) pleaded guilty and was sentenced today in
U.S. District Court for the District of Oregon for 15 felony charges, the
Justice Department announced. The company, based in Cairo, Egypt, admitted to
violating the Act to Prevent Pollution from Ships and making false statements to
federal officials. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department Requires Divestitures in Regal Cinemas' Merger with Consolidated Theatres (08-352)
The Department of Justice announced today that it will require Regal Cinemas
Inc. (Regal) and Consolidated Theatres Holding GP (Consolidated) to divest
movie theater assets in three North Carolina metropolitan areas in order to
proceed with their proposed $210 million merger (Read more) |
|
Mexican National Sentenced for Smuggling Protected Sea Turtles (08-345)
Carlos Leal Barragan, of Ciudad Guzman, Mexico, was sentenced today in U.S.
District Court for the District of Colorado to serve 16 months in prison and
three years supervised release in connection with his sale and smuggling of
internationally protected sea turtle skins and sea turtle products from Mexico
to the United States, the Justice Department announced. (Read more) |
| April 28, 2008 |
|
Two Men Sentenced for Human Trafficking and Alien Smuggling Charges (08-350)
Two brothers, Victor Omar Lopez and Oscar Mondragon, were sentenced for their
roles in a scheme to smuggle Central American women and girls into the United
States and hold them in a condition of forced labor in bars and cantinas in the
Houston area, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights
Division Grace C. Becker and U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Texas
Don DeGabrielle. U.S. District Judge Vanessa D. Gilmore sentenced Lopez to 109
months in prison followed by three years of probation and ordered that he,
jointly with his co-defendants, pay $1.7 million in restitution to the victims.
Mondragon was sentenced to 180 months of imprisonment and was ordered to pay,
jointly and severally with his co-defendants, over $1.1 million of the total of
over $1.7 million in restitution awarded in the case. (Read more) |
|
Second Defendant Pleads Guilty in Pensacola in International Child Exploitation Enterprise Case (08-349)
Stepan Bondarenko, 38, of Philadelphia became the second defendant to plead
guilty for his involvement in a vast global child pornography trafficking
enterprise, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division,
U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Florida Gregory R. Miller and FBI
Executive Assistant Director J. Stephen Tidwell announced today.
(Read more) |
|
Justice Department Announces Appointment of Ronald L. Rodgers as Pardon Attorney (08-348)
The Justice Department today announced that Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey
has appointed Ronald L. Rodgers to serve as the U.S. Pardon Attorney. Rodgers
will oversee the Office of the Pardon Attorney, which is responsible for
reviewing petitions for executive clemency and preparing recommendations for the
President. (Read more) |
| April 25, 2008 |
|
Louisiana Man Pleads Guilty to Federal Hate Crime (08-347)
WASHINGTON - Jeremiah Munsen, 18, of Colfax, La., pled guilty today to a federal
hate crime for his role in using nooses to threaten marchers who participated in
the “Jena Six” civil rights rally, announced Grace Chung Becker, Acting
Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division, and Donald W.
Washington, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Louisiana. (Read more) |
|
Mexican National Sentenced for Role in Carolinas Sex-Trafficking Ring (08-346)
WASHINGTON – Ciro Bustos-Rosales, a citizen of Mexico, was sentenced today in
federal court in Columbia, S.C., for his role in a sex trafficking ring
involving at least one teenage girl. Bustos-Rosales was sentenced to 70 months
in prison, ordered to pay restitution to the victims of his crimes in an amount
of $52,500, and placed on supervised release for the rest of his life. As a
condition of supervised release, U.S. District Judge Joseph F. Anderson Jr.
ordered that Bustos-Rosales be surrendered to immigration officials for
deportation proceedings and further ordered that Bustos-Rosales not return to
the United States while on supervised release. The sentencing for
Bustos-Rosales’ co-defendant, Jesus Perez-Laguna, also set for today, was
continued after Perez-Laguna complained that he was not prepared to go forward
with sentencing. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department to Review the Shooting of Sean Bell and Others
(08-344)
The Civil Rights Division of the U.S. Department of Justice, the United States
Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, and the Federal Bureau
of Investigation, New York Field Division, announced today that in light of the
acquittals of three New York City police officers in State Supreme Court in
Queens, N.Y., they will conduct an independent review of the facts and
circumstances surrounding the Nov. 25, 2006, shooting of Sean Bell and two
others that resulted in the death of Mr. Bell. (Read more) |
|
Former World Bank Employee Sentenced for Taking Kickbacks and Assisting in the Bribery of a Foreign Official
(08-341)
WASHINGTON – On April 22, 2008, former World Bank employee, Ramendra Basu, a
national of India and a permanent legal resident alien of the United States, was
sentenced to 15 months in prison for conspiring to steer World Bank contracts to
consultants in exchange for kickbacks and assisting a contractor in bribing a
foreign official in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, announced
Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division. (Read more) |
| April 24, 2008 |
|
Chesapeake Man Pleads Guilty, Sentenced to 12 Years in Prison for Transporting Child Pornography (08-340)
Willoughby Warren Colonna IV, 28, of Chesapeake, Va., pleaded guilty today in
Norfolk, Va., to one count of transporting child pornography via the Internet,
Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division and U.S.
Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia Chuck Rosenberg announced. Colonna
was then sentenced to serve 12 years in prison, to be followed by ten years of
supervised release, and ordered to pay a $100 special assessment. He was
immediately taken into custody. (Read more) |
|
Taiwanese And U.S. Companies Settle Clean Air Violations (08-339)
A Taiwanese manufacturer and three American corporations will pay a $2 million
civil penalty for allegedly importing and distributing approximately 200,000
chainsaws in the U.S. that failed to meet federal air pollution standards, the
Justice Department and Environmental Protection Agency announced today. The
companies also agreed to spend approximately $5 million on projects to reduce
air pollution.
(Read more) |
| April 23, 2008 |
|
Former State Prison Supervisor Sentenced for Obstruction of Justice-Related Charge (08-335)
Former Florida Department of Corrections Supervisory Corrections Officer Wilton
Joseph Fontenot was sentenced today in federal court in Jacksonville, Fla., for
the felony offense of falsifying an official report related to a civil rights
investigation. Fontenot was sentenced to 15 months in prison and 24 months of
post-incarceration supervised release. (Read more) |
|
Two New Jersey Executives Agree to Plead Guilty in Nationwide Scheme to Defraud the Federal E-rate Program (08-334)
Conspiracy charges were filed today in the U.S. District Court in Kansas City,
Kan., against Benjamin Rowner and Jay H. Soled, former owners of DeltaNet Inc.,
for their role in defrauding the E-Rate program. (Read more) |
|
Former Bristol-Myers Squibb Senior Vice President Indicted for Lying to the Federal Government about Popular Blood-Thinning Drug (08-333)
The Department of Justice announced today that the former senior vice president
of Bristol-Myers Squibb Company (BMS), Andrew Bodnar, was indicted for his role
in lying to the federal government about a patent deal involving the popular
blood-thinning drug, Plavix, used by heart attack, stroke and other patients. (Read more) |
|
Man Pleads Guilty to Acting as Venezuelan Agent (08-331)
Rodolfo Wanseele Paciello, 40, one of five foreign nationals accused of acting
and conspiring to act as an agent of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela
("Venezuela") within the United States without prior notification to the
Attorney General of the United States, pleaded guilty earlier today to acting as
an unregistered Venezuelan agent before U.S. District Court Judge Joan Lenard in
Miami. (Read more) |
|
Department of Justice Launches New Law Enforcement Strategy to Combat Increasing Threat of International Organized Crime (08-330)
Today Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey announced a new strategy in the fight
against international organized crime that will address this growing threat to
U.S. security and stability. The Law Enforcement Strategy to Combat
International Organized Crime (the strategy) was developed following an October
2007 International Organized Crime Threat Assessment (IOC Threat Assessment) and
will address the demand for a strategic, targeted and concerted U.S. response to
combat the identified threats. This strategy builds on the broad foundation the
Administration has developed in recent years to enhance information sharing, and
to secure U.S. borders and financial systems from a variety of transnational
threats. (Read more) |
|
Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey
Awards Attorney General’s Medallion to Tribal Justice Offical (08-329)
Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey today awarded the high honor of the Attorney
General’s Medallion to Lawrence Baca, former Deputy Director of the Department’s
Office of Tribal Justice, for his dedicated service related to the Civil Rights
of American Indians. (Read more) |
|
Former Oklahoma Corrections Officer Indicted for Federal Civil Rights Violation (08-328)
Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Grace Chung
Becker and U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Oklahoma Sheldon J.
Sperling announced today that Jarrod Anthony Yates, a former Sequoyah County,
Okla., corrections officer, was indicted by a federal grand jury in Muskogee,
Okla., for violating the civil rights of an inmate. (Read more) |
|
Florida Man Sentenced to 41 Months in Prison for Role in $30 Million Scheme to Defraud the U.S. Export-import Bank (08-322)
Daniel Curran, 53, of Boynton Beach, Fla., was sentenced to 41 months in prison
in connection with a $30 million scheme to defraud the Export-Import Bank (Ex-Im
Bank) of the United States, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the
Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Jeffrey A. Taylor of the District of
Columbia announced today. (Read more) |
| April 22, 2008 |
|
Pilot of Cosco Busan Indicted on New Charges (08-327)
Today, a federal grand jury returned an indictment charging John Joseph Cota, a
U.S. Coast Guard and California licensed ship pilot, with making false
statements to the Coast Guard concerning his medications and medical conditions
in 2006 and 2007. The false statements arose from annual physical examinations
that pilots are required to complete every year to maintain their pilot’s
license. (Read more) |
|
Foreign National Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy and Alien Smuggling Charges (08-325)
A Ghanaian man pleaded guilty to charges of conspiracy and alien smuggling in
connection with his role in smuggling East Africans to the United States,
Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division, U.S.
Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeffrey A. Taylor, and Assistant Secretary
Julie L. Myers of Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) announced today. (Read more) |
|
Man Arrested for Disclosing National Defense Information to Israel (08-324)
Michael J. Garcia, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Mark
J. Mershon, the Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Office of the
Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), and Weysan Dun, the Special
Agent-in-Charge of the Newark Office of the FBI, in conjunction with the U.S.
Army, announced today the arrest of Ben-Ami Kadish on charges that he
participated in a conspiracy to disclose to the Government of Israel documents
related to the national defense of the United States and, in connection with
that unauthorized disclosure, that he participated in a conspiracy to act as an
agent of the Government of Israel. According to the Complaint filed in Manhattan
federal court: (Read more) |
| April 21, 2008 |
|
Holly Refining Agrees to Spend Millions to Upgrade Pollution Controls (08-323)
Holly Refining & Marketing has agreed to spend more than $17 million in new and
upgraded pollution controls at its refinery in Woods Cross, Utah, and pay a
$120,000 civil penalty, the Justice Department and U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency (EPA) announced today. The settlement, which resolves alleged violations
of the Clean Air Act by Holly, is expected to reduce air pollution by more than
420 tons of harmful emissions annually. (Read more) |
|
Ohio Jury Finds Cincinnati-based Bank not Entitled to $5.6 Million Tax Refund (08-322)
A jury in Cincinnati ruled on Friday that Fifth Third Bancorp is not entitled to
a $5.6 million tax refund for its 1997 tax year, the Justice Department and the
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced today. Fifth Third was seeking to take
tax deductions that related to complex leasing transactions involving passenger
rail cars. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department to Monitor Election in Pennsylvania (08-321)
The Justice Department announced today that on April 22, 2008, it will monitor
the presidential primary election in the Philadelphia, Pa., to ensure compliance
with federal voting rights laws. In April 2007, the Justice Department reached
a settlement agreement with Philadelphia related to allegations that the city
had violated the Voting Rights Act, the Help America Vote Act (HAVA), and the
National Voter Registration Act (NVRA). (Read more) |
|
Canadian Night Vision Goggles Manufacturer and Two Executives Charged in Scheme to Defraud U.S. Military Procurement Unit for Iraq (08-320)
An indictment by a federal grand jury in San Francisco was unsealed today
against a Canadian night vision goggles manufacturing firm and two of its
executives for their role in a scheme to defraud the U.S. military in the supply
of equipment for the Iraqi army, the Department of Justice announced. (Read more) |
| April 18, 2008 |
|
Forest Park, Illinois, Police Officer Pleads Guilty to Federal Civil Rights Violation (08-319)
Grace Chung Becker, Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights
Division, together with Patrick Fitzgerald, U.S. Attorney for the Northern
District of Illinois, and Robert D. Grant, Special Agent in Charge of the
Chicago Division of the FBI, announced today that Michael Murphy, a sergeant
with the Forest Park Police Department, pleaded guilty in federal court to using
excessive force against a man in Forest Park, Ill. (Read more) |
|
California Man Convicted on Federal Tax Fraud Charges for Fraudulent Tax Preparation Scheme (08-318)
Matthew Carl Berry was convicted on federal tax fraud charges yesterday
following a jury trial in Riverside, Calif., the Department of Justice and
Internal Revenue Service (IRS) announced today. Berry, of Rialto, Calif., was
indicted on September 13, 2006, for one count of conspiracy to defraud the
United States and three counts of filing false income tax returns for his
personal taxes during the years of the conspiracy. The evidence at trial showed
that defendant Berry conspired with Karen Berry, Carla Berry, Ivan Johnson and
Valerie Dixon, each of whom already pleaded guilty to conspiracy to defraud the
United States and false preparation charges. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department Files Lawsuit against New York State Department of Correctional Services to Enforce the Employment Rights of New York Air National Guardsman (08-317)
The Department of Justice announced today that it has filed a lawsuit on behalf
of Patrick Anson, a member of the New York Air National Guard, against the New
York State Department of Correctional Services (NYSDOCS) alleging violations of
the Uniformed Services Employment and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (USERRA).
Also filed with the complaint is a settlement agreement reached by the Justice
Department and NYSDOCS that, if approved by the court, will resolve the United
States’ claims on behalf of Anson. (Read more) |
| April 17, 2008 |
|
New Orleans Hospital Pays $1.75 Million to Settle False Claims Act Allegations (08-316)
Touro Infirmary, a New Orleans Hospital, has agreed to pay the United States
$1.75 million to settle allegations that it submitted false claims to the
Medicare program, the Department of Justice announced today. (Read more) |
|
Two Indicted in San Antonio in Connection with Federal Civil Rights Investigation (08-315)
The Justice Department announced that a federal grand jury in San Antonio,
Texas, has returned a seven-count indictment today, charging former Bexar
County Adult Detention Center (BCADC) Corrections Officer Brandit Franco with
federal civil rights violations for using excessive force against two inmates in
2006. Deputy U.S. Marshal Benjamin Bates was also indicted for his misconduct
related to the grand jury investigation of the incident. (Read more) |
|
Department of Justice Celebrates 40th Anniversary of the Fair Housing Act (08-314)
The Department of Justice hosted a ceremony today celebrating the 40th
anniversary of the Fair Housing Act, enacted on April 11, 1968, and the legacy
of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., whose tragic death spurred passage of the Act.
The keynote speaker for the event, held in the Great Hall of the Robert F.
Kennedy Justice Building, was Stephen J. Pollak, Assistant Attorney General for
the Civil Rights Division when the Act became law. Deputy Attorney General Mark
Filip and Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Grace
Chung Becker also gave remarks.
(Read more) |
|
Foreign Service Officer Pleads Guilty to Child Pornography and Passport Misuse Charges (08-313)
Gons Gutierrez Nachman, 42, a U.S. Department of State Foreign Service Officer,
pleaded guilty to possessing child pornography as well as misusing his U.S.
diplomatic passport, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal
Division and Chuck Rosenberg, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia
announced today. (Read more) |
|
Long Island Defense Contractor Employee Pleads Guilty to Bid Rigging and Conspiracy to Commit Wire Fraud (08-312)
A former employee of a Long Island, N.Y., defense contractor pleaded guilty to
participating in a conspiracy to rig bids on military contracts for Navy straps
that are used to secure munitions and other supplies, the Department of Justice
announced today. (Read more) |
|
Former U.S. Executive of Italian Marine Hose Manufacturer Agrees to Plead Guilty to Participating in Worldwide Bid-Rigging Conspiracy (08-311)
A former U.S. executive of Manuli Rubber Industries SpA, a Milan, Italy-based
marine hose manufacturer, has agreed to plead guilty and serve jail time for
participating in a conspiracy to rig bids, fix prices and allocate market shares
of marine hose in the United States and elsewhere, the Department of Justice
announced today. (Read more) |
|
Idaho Man Pleads Guilty in International Child Exploitation Enterprise Case (08-310)
Warren Weber, 56, of Boise, Idaho, pleaded guilty today to charges concerning
his involvement in a vast global child pornography trafficking enterprise,
Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division, U.S.
Attorney for the Northern District of Florida Gregory R. Miller and FBI
Executive Assistant Director J. Stephen Tidwell announced. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department Settles Class Action Lawsuit with American Airlines Regarding Employment Rights of Military Pilots (08-309)
The Department of Justice today announced that it has reached an agreement with
American Airlines that, if approved by the U.S. District Court in Dallas, will
resolve the Department’s class action lawsuit against the nation’s largest
commercial air carrier, alleging it violated the Uniformed Services Employment
and Reemployment Rights Act of 1994 (USERRA). The Department’s complaint, filed
in 2006, alleges that American did not allow three named plaintiff pilots, and a
class of similarly situated pilots, to accrue vacation and sick leave benefits
while on military leave to the same extent as pilots on comparable forms of
non-military leave.
(Read more) |
| April 16, 2008 |
|
Michigan Attorney and Client Plead Guilty to Tax Crimes in Connection with a Fraudulent Insurance Tax Shelter (08-307)
Portage, Mich., resident John A. Campbell, a former partner in and resident
director of the Kalamazoo, Mich., office of the law firm of Miller, Canfield,
Paddock & Stone, P.L.C., pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud
the United States, the Department of Justice announced today. Campbell’s
client, Oskar René Poch, of Hickory Corners, Mich., pleaded guilty to one count
of a corruptly endeavoring to obstruct the administration of the Internal
Revenue laws. Poch owned and operated Trillium Staffing, an employee-leasing
company in Kalamazoo. The Honorable Janet T. Neff of the U.S. District Court
scheduled Poch’s sentencing for Oct. 21, 2008. No date has been set for
Campbell’s sentencing. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department Settles Voting Rights Suit against the Osceola County, Florida School Board (08-306)
The Justice Department announced today that it has settled a Voting Rights Act
lawsuit against the Osceola County, Fla., School Board. The Justice Department
simultaneously filed a complaint and consent decree today settling the suit in
the U.S. District Court for the Middle District of Florida in Orlando. (Read more) |
|
Ice and Department of Justice Joint Operation Targets Identity Theft at Poultry Processing Plants in Five States (08-305)
U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE), in coordination with the U.S.
Department of Justice and an array of other local, state and federal law
enforcement agencies, today arrested more than 280 foreign nationals employed at
Pilgrim’s Pride plants in five states who are suspected of committing identity
theft and other criminal violations in order to obtain their jobs. (Read more) |
|
Man Charged in Las Vegas Ricin Case (08-304)
Federal charges have been filed against the man who was discovered to have
possessed ricin in his Las Vegas hotel room in February, announced Gregory A.
Brower, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada. (Read more) |
|
International Competition Network Adopts Recommended Practices to Improve Merger Analysis and Assessment of Unilateral Conduct (08-303)
At the seventh annual International Competition Network (ICN) conference in
Kyoto, Japan, the ICN adopted new Recommended Practices to improve merger
analysis and assessment of unilateral conduct, the Department of Justice
announced today. (Read more) |
|
Japan Airlines International Agrees to Plead Guilty and Pay Criminal Fines for Fixing Prices on Cargo Shipments (08-302)
Tokyo-based Japan Airlines International Co. Ltd. (JAL) has agreed to plead
guilty and pay a $110 million criminal fine for its role in a conspiracy to fix
rates for international cargo shipments, the Department of Justice announced
today. (Read more) |
| April 15, 2008 |
|
Maryland Man Pleads Guilty to Child Pornography Charges (08-301)
Scott Carpenter, 44, of Dundalk, Md., has pleaded guilty to child pornography
charges, Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division and
U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein of the District of Maryland announced today. (Read more) |
|
Chinese Baby Furniture Company and its President Indicted for Smuggling Internationally Protected Wood (08-300)
Danny M. Chien, a Taiwanese citizen and resident of Shanghai, China, and Style
Craft Furniture Co., Ltd., were each indicted today by a federal grand jury in
Newark, N.J., on one count of smuggling, announced Ronald J. Tenpas, Assistant
Attorney General for the Justice Department’s Environment and Natural Resources
Division and Christopher J. Christie, U.S. Attorney for the District of New
Jersey. (Read more) |
|
Physicist Pleads Guilty to Conspiracy to Violate the Arms Export Control Act (08-299)
On April15, 2008, the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of
Tennessee, James R. Dedrick, and Acting Assistant Attorney General for National
Security, Patrick Rowan, announced that Daniel Max Sherman pled guilty to
conspiracy to violate the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. Section 2778), in
violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 371. Sherman, 37, formerly
of Knoxville, currently resides in Littleton, Colorado. He is a physicist who
formerly worked at Atmospheric Glow Technologies, Incorporated, a
Knoxville-based technology company.
(Read more) |
| April 14, 2008 |
|
Florida Radiologist to Pay U.S. $7 Million to Resolve Fraud Claims (08-292)
A board-certified radiologist, Fred Steinberg, M.D., his imaging centers and
related entities in Palm Beach County, Fla., have reached a settlement with the
United States to resolve allegations of health care fraud, the Justice
Department announced today. Under the terms of the settlement, the U.S.
recovered $7 million. (Read more) |
| April 11, 2008 |
|
Federal Court Bars Oregon Family and Associate from Promoting Tax Fraud Scheme (08-297)
An Oregon federal court has permanently barred John Fitzgerald of Portland and
his three daughters—Marilyn Dial, Martha Farr Sharp and Karen Gray—from
marketing a tax fraud scheme involving sham nonprofit corporations that
customers used to evade federal taxes, the Justice Department announced today.
The civil injunction order also bars Noreen McCausland, a family associate, from
promoting the scheme. (Read more) |
|
Former Dallas Transit Police Officer Pleads Guilty to Federal Civil Rights Violation (08-296)
Lance Kendall Bonner of Dallas, Texas, a former police officer with Dallas Area
Rapid Transit (DART), pleaded guilty today in federal court to violating the
civil rights of a Dallas woman, the Department of Justice announced. (Read more) |
|
Federal Court Permanently Bars Michigan Man from Preparing Tax Returns (08-295)
A federal judge in Detroit has permanently barred Eric D. Parrish of Ecorse,
Mich., from preparing federal tax returns for others, the Justice Department
announced today. The complaint in the civil injunction suit alleged that
Parrish’s Detroit business, E Professionals, claimed bogus deductions and
credits on customers’ federal income tax returns. The court found that Parrish
repeatedly engaged in misconduct subject to penalties under federal tax laws,
thus warranting the permanent ban on return preparation. (Read more) |
|
Foreign National Sentenced to Nine Years in Prison for Hotel Business Center Computer Fraud Scheme (08-294)
Mario Simbaqueba Bonilla, 40, a Colombian citizen, was sentenced today to nine
years in prison, resulting from his guilty plea to a 16-count indictment
involving a complex computer fraud scheme victimizing more than 600 people,
Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division, U.S.
Attorney Alex Acosta for the Southern District of Florida, the U.S. Department
of Defense, Defense Criminal Investigative Service (DCIS), and the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service announced today. Simbaqueba Bonilla was also sentenced to
three years supervised release upon his release from prison and ordered to pay
restitution of $347,000. (Read more) |
|
Former KBR Employee Sentenced for Scheme to Defraud the U.S. Department of Defense (08-293)
Wallace A. Ward, 26, of Spring Lake, N.C., a former Kellogg, Brown & Root (KBR)
employee who worked in Afghanistan, was sentenced today in U.S. District Court
to 26 months in prison for conspiring to receive bribes, making false statements
and filing false claims, announced Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of
the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Chuck Rosenberg for the Eastern District
of Virginia. (Read more) |
|
Pennsylvania Contractor Pleads Guilty to Participating in
Fraud Conspiracy at New York Presbyterian Hospital (08-291)
A Pennsylvania general contractor for residential and commercial buildings
pleaded guilty today to conspiring to defraud New York Presbyterian Hospital
(NYPH) for his role in a conspiracy to pay kickbacks to a former senior
purchasing official at NYPH. (Read more) |
|
Department of Justice will not Challenge Media Industry Association's Proposal Regarding Audit Provision for Audience Measurement Tools (08-290)
The Department of Justice announced today it will not challenge a proposal by
the Media Ratings Council (MRC) relating to the auditing and accrediting of
products that measure the size and demographics of an audience. (Read more) |
| April 10, 2008 |
|
Protective Products Pays $960,000 to the U.S. in Connection with the Sale of Defective Zylon Bulletproof Vests (08-288)
Protective Products International Inc. (PPI) has agreed to pay the United States
$960,000 to resolve allegations it violated the False Claims Act by supplying
defective Zylon bulletproof vests, the Justice Department announced today. As
part of the agreement, PPI has pledged its cooperation in the government’s
ongoing investigation of other entities that manufactured and sold Zylon vests
purchased by the government. (Read more) |
|
MEDIA ADVISORY
Thomas O. Barnett to Participate in Seventh Annual International Competition Network Conference in Kyoto, Japan (08-287)
Assistant Attorney General Thomas O. Barnett will participate in the seventh
annual International Competition Network (ICN) Conference in Kyoto, Japan, April
14–16, 2008, when senior government antitrust officials, private sector
antitrust experts from around the world, and representatives from
intergovernmental organizations will discuss competition issues. (Read more) |
|
Justice Department Issues 2002-2007
Supplement to the “Digest of Business Reviews” (08-286)
The Department of Justice Antitrust Division today released the 2002 through
2007 Supplement to the “Digest of Business Reviews.” (Read more) |
| April 9, 2008 |
|
Department of Defense Contractor Pleads Guilty to Conspiracies to Steal Information Related to Fuel Supply Contracts (08-285)
A U.S. Department of Defense (DOD) contractor from Baltimore pleaded guilty
today to conspiring to steal competitive information concerning contracts to
supply fuel to DOD aircraft at locations worldwide, the Department of Justice
announced. (Read more) |
|
Statement by Attorney General Michael B. Mukasey on the Fortieth Anniversary of the Fair Housing Act (08-284)
Forty years ago, this Nation made a commitment to provide for fair access to
housing throughout the United States with the enactment of the Fair Housing Act.
The original Act, passed only days after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., made it illegal to discriminate on the basis of race, color, national
origin, or religion in the sale, rental or financing of housing. On several
occasions since that time, we have reaffirmed and expanded our country’s
dedication to the principle of fair housing, extending the Act’s protections to
include sex, disability, and familial status and providing for much-needed
enforcement tools. (Read more) |
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North Carolina Dental Services Chain Pays $10 Million to Resolve False Claims Allegations (08-282)
Medicaid Dental Center (MDC), a privately-owned chain of dental clinics in North
Carolina previously known as Smile Starters and Carolina Dental Center, has
reached a settlement with the United States and North Carolina to resolve False
Claims Act allegations, the Justice Department announced today. Under the
agreement, MDC agreed to pay $10,050,000 to resolve allegations that it caused
false or fraudulent claims for payment to be presented to the North Carolina
Medicaid program by billing for medically unnecessary dental services performed
on indigent children. (Read more) |
| April 8, 2008 |
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Former South Carolina Deputy Sheriff Pleads Guilty to Civil Rights Violation (08-281)
Christopher M. Lanoue, a former deputy with the Charleston County, S.C.,
Sheriff’s Office, pleaded guilty today in federal court in Charleston to using
excessive force during an arrest, the Justice Department announced.
(Read more) |
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Federal Grand Jury Charges Two Companies and Owner John Stagliano with Obscenity Violations (08-280)
A producer of allegedly obscene movies and two companies owned by him have been
charged by a federal grand jury in Washington, D.C., with operating an obscenity
distribution business and related offenses, Assistant Attorney General Alice S.
Fisher of the Criminal Division announced today. (Read more) |
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Justice Department Settles Sexual Harassment Lawsuit against Richmond, Missouri, Landlord (08-279)
The Justice Department announced today that Calvert Properties Inc. has agreed
to pay $250,000 to settle a lawsuit alleging that its former president, Harold
Calvert, of Richmond, Mo., sexually harassed female tenants in violation of the
Fair Housing Act. (Read more) |
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Justice Department Files Injunction Suits in Nationwide Crackdown on Alleged Tax Defier Scheme Promoters (08-278)
The United States has filed civil injunction complaints in three federal courts
on the east and west coasts, seeking to bar promotions of alleged tax-fraud
schemes, the Justice Department announced today. The government complaints and
other court papers allege that a multi-level marketing organization called
Pinnacle Quest International (PQI) and a number of individuals and organizations
currently or formerly affiliated with it are promoting a variety of fraudulent
tax defier schemes. (Read more) |
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Nathan J. Hochman, Tax Division’s Assistant Attorney General, Announces the Creation of the National Tax Defier Initiative (08-275)
Today Nathan J. Hochman, Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s
Tax Division, announced the creation of the National Tax Defier Initiative or
TAXDEF. The purpose of this initiative is to reaffirm and reinvigorate the Tax
Division’s commitment to investigate, pursue and, where appropriate, prosecute
those who take concrete action to defy and deny the fundamental validity of the
tax laws. (Read more) |
| April 7, 2008 |
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Justice Department to Monitor Election in California (08-277)
The Justice Department today announced that on Tuesday, April 8, 2008, it will
monitor the municipal election in the City of Walnut, Calif., to ensure
compliance with the Voting Rights Act. (Read more) |
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Hartford Man Sentenced for Role in Trafficking Ring (08-276)
The Justice Department announced today that Brian Forbes of Hartford, Conn., was
sentenced today to 156 months in prison for his involvement in a sex trafficking
ring that victimized minor girls and coerced young women to engage in commercial
sex acts against their will. Forbes was also ordered to serve 3 years of
supervised release and to pay $16,339 in restitution to his victims. Forbes was
charged in a 64-count superseding indictment, along with nine other
co-defendants, on Aug. 8, 2006. Mr. Forbes pleaded guilty on March 4, 2007, to
three counts of sex trafficking of minors, two counts of sex trafficking adult
women (through force, fraud, or coercion) and one count of conspiracy to use
interstate facilities to promote prostitution. (Read more) |
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ConocoPhillips Pays $1.2 Million to Settle Clean Water Act Violations (08-274)
ConocoPhillips, an international energy company, has agreed to pay a $1.2
million civil penalty to resolve alleged violations of the Clean Water Act
related to over 2,000 effluent discharges from a petroleum refinery it operates
in Borger, Texas, the Justice Department and Environmental Protection Agency
(EPA) announced. (Read more) |
| April 4, 2008 |
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Ship Operator Pleads Guilty to Concealing Vessel Pollution (08-272)
PACCSHIP, the operator and manager of approximately ten ships that regularly
carry goods between Asia and ports in the United States, pleaded guilty today
and was sentenced to pay a $1.7 million fine for crimes related to improper
transfers and discharges of oil-contaminated waste from two of its ships,
announced Ronald J. Tenpas, Assistant Attorney General for the Justice
Department’s Environment and Natural Resources Division and George E. B.
Holding, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina. (Read more) |
| April 3, 2008 |
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Houston Woman Pleads Guilty to Forced Labor Charges (08-271)
HOUSTON - Rozina Mohd Ali pleaded guilty and was sentenced today in federal
district court in Houston, Texas, for her role in holding an Indonesian woman in
forced labor as a domestic servant, the Justice Department has announced. Under
the terms of the plea agreement, Ali, 43, of Sugarland, Texas, will spend one
year and a day in prison and will pay the victim $72,676 in restitution. (Read more) |
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Federal Court in Seattle Permanently Shuts Down “Warehouse Bank” Tax Defier Operation with $28 Million in Deposits over Four Years (08-269)
A federal court in Seattle has permanently shut down a nationwide “warehouse
bank” tax defier scheme used to help customers evade federal taxes, the Justice
Department announced today. The warehouse bank, known as Olympic Business
Systems, was operated by Des Moines, Wash., resident Robert Arant. (Read more) |
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Chicago Police Officer Indicted for Federal Civil Rights Violation (08-264)
Acting Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division Grace Chung
Becker and U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois Patrick
Fitzgerald announced today that Chicago police officer William Cozzi was
indicted yesterday by a federal grand jury in Chicago for violating the civil
rights of a restrained man. (Read more) |
| April 2, 2008 |
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Owner of Medicare Billing Service Sentenced to 10 Years in Prison for Role in $170 Million Medicare Fraud Scheme (08-267)
Miami resident Rita Campos Ramirez, 60, was sentenced to 10 years in prison for
her role in a $170 million scheme to defraud Medicare, Assistant Attorney
General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney R. Alexander
Acosta of the Southern District of Florida announced today. The scheme
represents the largest known individual case of Medicare fraud in the history of
the program. (Read more) |
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Leader of Casino-Cheating Criminal Enterprise Pleads Guilty to Racketeering Conspiracy Targeting at Least 16 Casinos (08-266)
Phuong Quoc Truong, also known as John Truong and “Pai Gow” John, pleaded guilty
today in San Diego to conspiring to participate in the conduct of the affairs of
a racketeering enterprise, the “Tran Organization,” in a scheme to cheat at
least 16 casinos across the country out of millions of dollars, Criminal
Division Assistant Attorney General Alice S. Fisher, U.S. Attorney for the
Southern District of California Karen P. Hewitt, and U.S. Attorney for the
Western District of Washington Jeffrey C. Sullivan announced today. (Read more) |
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Seven Miami-Area Residents Charged in $11 Million Medicare Fraud Scheme (08-265)
Seven Miami-area residents have been indicted in connection with an $11 million
Medicare fraud scheme involving HIV infusion clinics, Assistant Attorney General
Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney R. Alexander Acosta
of the Southern District of Florida announced today. (Read more) |
| April 1, 2008 |
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Houston Women Sentenced for Human Trafficking Related Charges (08-263)
Defendants Olga Mondragon and Maria Fuentes were sentenced today for their roles
in a scheme to smuggle Central American women and girls into the United States
and hold them in a condition of forced labor in bars and cantinas in the Houston
area, announced Acting Assistant Attorney General for Justice Department’s Civil
Rights Grace C. Becker and U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Texas Don
DeGabrielle. (Read more) |
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Connecticut Woman Sentenced for Role in Sex Trafficking Ring (08-262)
The Justice Department announced today that Shanaya Hicks of Bloomfield, Conn.,
was sentenced today to 46 months in prison for her involvement in a prostitution
ring that victimized minor girls and coerced young women to engage in commercial
sex acts against their will. (Read more) |
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U.S. Joins Case against Cincinnati Health Care Facilities Alleging Kickbacks for Cardiac Services (08-261)
The United States has intervened in a whistleblower suit accusing The Christ
Hospital, The Health Alliance of Greater Cincinnati and The Ohio Heart Health
Center of defrauding federal health care programs, the Justice Department
announced today. The lawsuit alleges that Christ Hospital, a full service
Cincinnati-based hospital and formerly a member of The Health Alliance, and Ohio
Heart, the largest cardiology group in that region of Ohio, devised a scheme
that provided cardiologists improper financial incentives in exchange for
generating revenue for the hospital. (Read more) |
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Montana Board of Realty Regulation Permits Real Estate Brokers to Offer Rebates to Consumers (08-260)
The Department of Justice announced today that the Montana Board of Realty
Regulation has voted to repeal a rule forbidding real estate brokers from
offering rebates and other incentives to their customers. The Board took this
action in response to an investigation by the Department’s Antitrust Division. (Read more) |
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Former Wrestler Sentenced on Sex Trafficking
and Forced Labor Charges (08-259)
Former professional wrestler Harrison Norris Jr., 42, a/k/a “Hardbody
Harrison,” from Cartersville, Ga., was sentenced today to life in prison and
lifetime supervised release for committing multiple violations of federal sex
trafficking and forced labor statutes in connection with a scheme to force women
into prostitution. He was also sentenced to pay a $2,400 special assessment. (Read more) |
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