Former Sheriff Previously Sentenced to 50 Months; Sheriff’s
Uncle Also Sentenced in Scheme
A former Rutherford County Sheriff Chief Deputy of
Administration was sentenced today to 15 months in prison for operating a
private electronic cigarette company in the county jail for personal gain,
announced Acting Assistant Attorney General Kenneth A. Blanco of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Don Cochran of the Middle
District of Tennessee.
Joe L. Russell II, 50, of Murfreesboro, Tennessee, was
sentenced today by Senior U.S. District Judge Marvin E. Aspen of the Northern
District of Illinois, sitting by designation in the Middle District of
Tennessee, who also ordered Russell to pay $52,500 in restitution and to
forfeit $52,234.41, an amount equal to all proceeds he received from JailCigs. Russell, along with former Rutherford County
Sheriff Robert F. Arnold, 41, of Murfreesboro, Tennessee, and Arnold’s uncle,
John Vanderveer, 59, of Marietta, Georgia, were named in a 14-count indictment
in May 2016 charging them with honest services fraud, mail fraud, wire fraud,
bribery concerning federal programs, extortion under color of official right,
obstruction of justice and conspiracy.
According to his plea, Russell admitted to forming JailCigs
along with Arnold and Vanderveer in 2013; using Arnold’s official position as
Sheriff of Rutherford County to benefit JailCigs by allowing the company’s
electronic cigarettes to come into the Rutherford County jail as non-contraband
and to be distributed by county employees; taking steps to disguise their
involvement in the company; and misrepresenting the benefits that Rutherford
County was supposedly receiving from JailCigs.
Arnold pleaded guilty in January 2017 and was sentenced in
May 2017 to 50 months in prison and ordered to pay $52,500 in restitution and
to forfeit $66,790. Vanderveer was
sentenced in September 2017 to one year plus one day in prison for attempting
to tamper with a key witness in the investigation by asking her to destroy
incriminating documents related to the scheme.
Vanderveer was ordered to pay $52,500 in restitution.
The FBI and Tennessee Bureau of Investigation investigated
the case. Trial Attorneys Mark J.
Cipolletti of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section and Andrew Laing of the
Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Cecil
W. VanDevender of the Middle District of Tennessee prosecuted the case.
No comments:
Post a Comment