The owner of two Arkansas mental health companies that
provide inpatient and outpatient mental health services to juveniles was found
guilty yesterday of engaging in a scheme to bribe a former deputy director of
the Arkansas Department of Human Services (ADHS), announced Assistant Attorney
General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Department of Justice’s Criminal Division.
Theodore E. Suhl, 50, of Warm Springs, Arkansas, was
convicted by a federal jury of two counts of honest services fraud, one count
of federal funds bribery and one count of interstate travel in aid of
bribery.
The evidence presented at trial showed that Suhl bribed
former deputy director of ADHS, Steven B. Jones, using intermediaries Phillip
W. Carter and a local pastor. Trial
evidence demonstrated that beginning in approximately April 2007, Suhl, Jones
and Carter periodically met at restaurants in Memphis, Tennessee, or in rural
Arkansas in order for Suhl to request assistance for his companies from Jones
in his capacity as deputy director of ADHS.
Jones agreed to perform official acts that benefitted Suhl and Suhl’s
businesses and provided internal ADHS information to Suhl, according to
evidence presented at trial. The trial
evidence also showed that, in exchange for Jones’s agreement to perform
official acts, Suhl paid Jones by funneling cash payments through the pastor’s
church and providing the bribe payments to Jones in cash so that the
transactions would not be easily traceable.
Jones pleaded guilty to federal funds bribery and conspiracy
for his involvement in the scheme and was sentenced to 30 months in
prison. Carter pleaded guilty to
conspiracy to commit federal funds bribery and honest services wire fraud and
was sentenced to 24 months in prison.
The FBI’s Little Rock Field Office investigated the
case. Trial Attorneys Lauren Bell, John
D. Keller and Amanda R. Vaughn of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity
Section are prosecuting the case.
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