WASHINGTON – Two members of the U.S.
Army have each pleaded guilty to a bribery charge for their roles in a scheme
to steal jet fuel at Forward Operating Base (FOB) Fenty near Jalalabad,
Afghanistan, Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division announced today.
Sergeant Regionald Dixon, 30, pleaded guilty yesterday
in the District of Hawaii to one count of bribery and Specialist Larry Emmons,
25, pleaded guilty to one count of bribery on June 8, 2012. Dixon and Emmons, both of Schofield Barracks,
Hawaii, pleaded guilty before U.S. District Judge Leslie Kobayashi.
According to court documents, on or about Jan.
1, 2012, Dixon and another co-conspirator sergeant in the U.S. Army, agreed to
participate in a scheme to steal JP8 jet fuel from FOB Fenty. Specialist Emmons joined the scheme when he
returned to FOB Fenty from midtour leave on or about Jan. 22, 2012.
According to court documents, Dixon, Emmons
and others surreptitiously filled 3,000-gallon trucks with JP8 jet fuel. The trucks were owned by an Afghan military
trucking contractor and were termed “jingle trucks” for their bright
adornments. When filling the jingle
trucks, the defendants and their co-conspirators took steps to conceal their
activities, including filling the trucks in clandestine locations and at times
of day least likely to arouse suspicion.
Court documents state that Emmons or a
co-conspirator created fraudulent transportation movement requests (TMR),
military documents that officially authorize the movement of fuel from FOB
Fenty to another location, usually another military base in that geographic
area. Emmons and his co-conspirator gave
the fraudulent TMRs to the drivers of the jingle trucks, who presented the
fraudulent TMRs at the secure departure checkpoint at FOB Fenty to justify their
departure with a truckload of JP8 jet fuel.
In return for their official acts in
facilitating the theft of fuel from FOB Fenty, Dixon, Emmons and a
co-conspirator were paid $6,000 per 3,000-gallon truckload of JP8 jet fuel.
As part of their plea agreements, Dixon and
Emmons agreed to forfeit various amounts of cash seized from them or their
residences or voluntarily surrendered to federal agents.
At sentencing, scheduled for Oct. 4, 2012,
Dixon and Emmons each face up to 15 years in prison.
These cases are being prosecuted by Trial Attorney
Mark W. Pletcher of the Fraud Section in the Justice Department’s Criminal
Division. The cases were investigated by
the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction; the Department of
the Army, Criminal Investigations Division; the Defense Criminal Investigative
Service; the FBI; and the Department of the Air Force, Office of Special
Investigations. Valuable assistance was
also provided by the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs.
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