BOISE - Three defendants have been sentenced for their roles
in a bribery scheme uncovered by an FBI investigation at Idaho Department of
Correction’s (“IDOC”) request to address concerns of corruption among IDOC
correction officers, U.S. Attorney Bart M. Davis announced. On March 7, 2019, Senior U.S. District Judge
Edward J. Lodge sentenced former IDOC correctional officer Joshua Barney, 44,
to 15 months in prison for smuggling in contraband to former IDOC inmate Collin
McIntyre. Also on March 7, 2019, Judge
Lodge sentenced McIntyre, 27, to 12 months in prison. Judge Lodge ordered that Barney and McIntyre
be placed on supervised release for three years following their prison
sentences.
The third defendant was sentenced on March 6, 2019. Judge Lodge sentenced Tiffany Culbertson, 23,
who, at the time, was McIntyre’s girlfriend and who gave Barney the bribe money
from McIntyre, to a three‑year term of probation with six
weekends to be spent in jail.
All three defendants pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit
Hobbs Act extortion under official color of right. According to court records, Culbertson agreed
with McIntyre to pay Barney, a correctional officer at IDOC, to bring in
contraband in exchange for money. The
defendants then followed through with the plan.
On one occasion, Culbertson purchased smokeless tobacco and delivered it
to Barney, along with a bribe payment.
Barney then brought the tobacco into the prison and delivered it to
McIntyre, which was prohibited under IDOC policies. At a later date, Culbertson provided a cell
phone to Barney, who brought it into the prison and gave it to McIntyre.
This case was investigated by the FBI and IDOC’s Special
Investigations Unit.
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