CHARLESTON, W.Va. -- Allen H. Loughry II, 48, of Charleston,
West Virginia, a former Justice of the Supreme Court of Appeals of West
Virginia, was sentenced to 24 months in prison by Senior United States District
Judge John T. Copenhaver, Jr., announced United States Attorney Mike Stuart. Loughry was also ordered to pay restitution
totaling $1,273 to the State of West Virginia and the Pound Civil Justice
Institute. After an eleven-day trial in
October 2018, a federal jury found Loughry guilty of one count of mail fraud,
seven counts of wire fraud, and two counts of lying to the Federal Bureau of
Investigation. Agents with the FBI and the West Virginia Commission on Special
Investigations conducted the investigation.
“Today is an important day.
It is important for the people of West Virginia, in restoring the
confidence of our citizens in the West Virginia Supreme Court, and in
reaffirming the rule of law and the administration of justice,” said United
States Attorney Mike Stuart. “Our system
proved that it works. Arguably more
important than any other part of the criminal justice system, sentencing is a
reflection of our values as a society. The goals of sentencing are inherently
contradictory and always involve a balancing of competing goals. These three
goals are deterrence, denunciation, and rehabilitation. I want to thank my
prosecution team, defense counsel and the jury for their tireless but critical
roles in ensuring a just and fair result.
I reiterate my amazing respect for the majesty of our system of justice
– albeit imperfect it is the finest system known to mankind and the envy of the
world. The preservation of liberty is
best maintained through the confidence of the people in our system of fair and
equal justice.”
Stuart continued, “I said it before and I will say it again,
there’s no such thing as a little bit of public corruption. It is a cancer that
erodes the public’s confidence in government and undermines the rule of law.
Integrity and honesty need not be exceptions but, rather, should be the
standard we expect from our public servants.
To quote Mr. Loughry, as stated in his book: ‘It is essential that people have the
absolute confidence in the integrity and impartiality of our system of
justice.’ Today, with the sentence of Mr. Loughry, our system of justice took a
big step in furthering the people’s confidence.”
"Public corruption is a betrayal of the public's sacred
trust," said FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Jones. "There is no
level of acceptable corruption. The FBI will work tirelessly to make sure those
in power positions uphold the law and are held to the highest standards."
Loughry’s convictions resulted from fraudulent activity
while he was a sitting Justice on the Supreme Court. The mail fraud conviction
stemmed from his defrauding the Pound Civil Justice Institute of approximately
$400 in the summer of 2014, when he claimed mileage to attend a conference in
Baltimore, Maryland, as if he had driven his own personal vehicle when in fact
he drove a Supreme Court vehicle. The seven wire fraud convictions related to
Loughry’s using a government fuel card to buy gasoline for travel that was not
official business. Two of those wire fraud convictions, Counts 5 and 10 of the
Second Superseding Indictment, involved purchases of gasoline by Loughry late
at night on a holiday or weekend, not long after he had already filled up the
Supreme Court’s vehicle with gasoline upon returning from a trip. The remaining
five convictions for wire fraud involved purchases of gasoline with a
government fuel card and travel by Loughry in a Supreme Court vehicle to attend
book-signing events at The Greenbrier Resort, for the book Loughry authored in
2006 about public corruption in West Virginia.
Loughry’s two convictions for lying to the FBI resulted from
false answers he gave during an interview on March 2, 2018, by a Special Agent
of the FBI. During that interview, Loughry claimed he never used a state
vehicle for personal use and that he did not know that a desk he had in his
home was a “Cass Gilbert desk” or even a desk anyone had ever claimed to be a
Cass Gilbert desk.
AUSAs Philip H. Wright and R. Gregory McVey handled the
prosecution.
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