JEFFERSON CITY, MO—David M. Ketchmark,
Acting United States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri, announced
that a former Howard County, Missouri man was sentenced in federal court today
for operating two cattle fraud schemes in which 28 victims, including The
Callaway Bank in Fulton, Missouri, as well as numerous individuals, lost nearly
$8 million.
Kevin Ray Asbury, 44, formerly of Howard
County, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Nanette K. Laughrey to nine years
in federal prison without parole.
On August 21, 2012, Asbury pleaded
guilty to bank fraud, wire fraud, and money laundering. Asbury admitted that he
was involved in two separate fraud schemes, both of which involved his cattle
business, R&K Angus Ranch in Howard County, Missouri, from December 2006 to
October 2008.
Asbury’s business included soliciting
investors throughout the United States to pay a portion of the purchase price
for cattle, which he would raise and sell. Investors then received a
predetermined return from the sale of those cattle. Both of Asbury’s fraud
schemes involved false and fraudulent statements that he owned, bought, and
sold cattle when, in reality, he had not done so.
Cattle
Investor Fraud Scheme
Asbury admitted that in May 2007, when
he began to have insufficient funds to pay both personal and business debts, he
began operating a Ponzi-type scheme. Asbury continually solicited new investors
in cattle transactions based on the false promises that he would use their
funds to purchase cattle. Instead, he misappropriated the funds for personal
use, to pay debts, and to pay purported “returns” to investors in prior
fraudulent transactions. Asbury also obtained loans from persons that had
previously invested in fraudulent cattle transactions, based on his false
representations that he owned cattle that he would soon sell to pay back the
loans; in reality, Asbury admitted, he did not own the cattle.
Through this scheme, Asbury defrauded at
least 27 individuals and businesses of approximately $5.1 million.
Asbury pleaded guilty to one count of
wire fraud and one count of money laundering in relation to this scheme.
Callaway
Bank Fraud Scheme
Asbury obtained a $4 million business
line of credit from The Callaway Bank in February 2007. The majority of the
collateral for that line of credit was to be cattle that Asbury claimed to own,
though, in reality, he did not own the cattle. Asbury admitted that he showed
several thousand head of cattle to a bank representative and falsely claimed to
own all of the cattle on land he falsely claimed to lease. Although Asbury
claimed to own approximately 6,000 head of cattle worth approximately $7
million, in reality, he did not at any time own anywhere near that amount of
cattle.
When the bank sent representatives to
Asbury’s farm to recover collateral in October 2008, Asbury told them he did
not own any cattle. The bank was able to recover some collateral, including
some farm equipment, but lost more than $2.7 million as a result of the fraud
scheme.
Asbury also admitted that he had sold
assets that were pledged as collateral for his business line of credit from The
Callaway Bank, including cattle that he did own, but did not inform the bank of
the sale of those assets or provide the proceeds from those sales to the bank.
Asbury pleaded guilty to one count of
bank fraud in relation to this scheme.
This case was prosecuted by Assistant
U.S. Attorney Brian P. Casey. It was investigated by the FBI, IRS-Criminal
Investigation, and the Missouri State Highway Patrol.
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