A former congressional staffer was sentenced today to 18
months in prison and ordered to pay $800,000 in restitution, to be followed by
three years of supervised release, for participating in a multi-year scheme to
defraud charitable donors of hundreds of thousands of dollars and secretly to
funnel the proceeds to pay for personal expenses and to illegally finance
campaigns for federal office.
Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the
Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Ryan K. Patrick of the
Southern District of Texas, Assistant Director in Charge Nancy McNamara of
FBI’s Washington Field Office and Special Agent in Charge D. Richard Goss of
the IRS Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI) Houston Field Office made the
announcement.
Thomas Dodd, 40, of Houston, Texas, was sentenced in the
U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas by Chief U.S. District
Judge Lee H. Rosenthal. Dodd was also
ordered to forfeit $153,044.28 in illicit gains. Dodd pleaded guilty on March 20, 2017, to one
count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud and one count of conspiracy
to make conduit contributions and false statements. As part of his plea, Dodd admitted that he
participated in a scheme led by former U.S. Representative Stephen E. Stockman,
62, who was convicted by a federal jury in Houston on April 12 of 23 counts of
mail fraud, wire fraud, conspiracy to make conduit contributions and false
statements to the Federal Election Commission (FEC), making false statements to
the Federal Election Commission, making excessive coordinated campaign
contributions, money laundering, and filing a false tax return. Another of Stockman’s former congressional
staffers, Jason T. Posey, 48, of Tupelo, Mississippi, pleaded guilty on Oct.
11, 2017, to one count of mail fraud, one count of wire fraud, and one count of
money laundering.
According to the evidence presented at Stockman’s trial,
from May 2010 to February 2014, Stockman and his co-defendants solicited
$1,250,571.65 in donations from charitable organizations and the individuals
who ran those organizations based on false pretenses, then used a series of
sham nonprofit organizations and dozens of bank accounts to launder the money
before it was used for a variety of personal and campaign expenses.
Specifically, the evidence established that in 2010,
Stockman and Dodd solicited an elderly donor in Baltimore, Maryland for
$285,000 to be used for legitimate charitable and educational purposes. Stockman and Dodd used a sham charity named
the Ross Center to funnel the money to be used for a variety of personal
expenses. The evidence further
established that, in 2011 and 2012, Stockman and Dodd received an additional
$165,000 in charitable donations from the Baltimore donor, much of which
Stockman used illegally to finance his 2012 congressional campaign.
The trial evidence also showed that shortly after Stockman
took office as a member of the U.S. House of Representatives in 2013, he and
Dodd used the name of another sham nonprofit entity, Life Without Limits, to
solicit and receive a $350,000 charitable donation, to be used to create an
educational center called the Freedom House.
Stockman, Dodd, and Posey instead used this donation for a variety of
personal and campaign expenses, including illegal conduit campaign
contributions, a covert surveillance project targeting a perceived political
opponent, an in-patient alcoholism treatment for a female associate, and
payments for hundreds of thousands of robocalls and mailings promoting
Stockman’s candidacy for U.S. Senate in early 2014.
In addition, the evidence established that, in connection
with Stockman’s Senate campaign, Stockman and Posey used another sham nonprofit
entity to secure a $450,571.65 donation in order to fund a purportedly legitimate
independent expenditure promoting Stockman’s candidacy. The evidence showed that the purportedly
independent expenditure was in fact secretly controlled by Stockman, who
directed his campaign and Posey to file false affidavits with the FEC covering
up Stockman’s involvement.
Finally, the evidence at trial demonstrated that Stockman
failed to pay taxes on any of the $1,250,571.65 in fraudulently acquired
donations. In addition, during the early
stages of the investigation, Stockman directed Posey to flee to Cairo, Egypt,
for two and a half years so that Posey could not be questioned by law
enforcement.
The FBI and IRS-CI investigated the case. Deputy Chief Robert J. Heberle and Trial
Attorney Ryan J. Ellersick of the Criminal Division’s Public Integrity Section
and Assistant U.S. Attorney Melissa Annis of the Southern District of Texas are
prosecuting the case.
No comments:
Post a Comment