A local nonprofit owner has pleaded guilty to his role in a
public corruption scandal, admitting he funneled bribes from real estate developer
Ruel Hamilton to former Dallas City Council Member Carolyn Davis, announced
U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Texas Erin Nealy Cox.
Jeremy Scroggins, 44, pleaded guilty to misprision of a
felony, or concealing knowledge of the actual commission of a felony, before
Chief U.S. District Judge Barbara M.G. Lynn on Tuesday.
“As I have said from the start of my tenure as U.S.
Attorney, North Texas will not and cannot tolerate public corruption at any
level,” said U.S. Attorney Nealy Cox. “Mr. Scroggins facilitated bribe
payments, and must be held accountable. ”
“Public corruption is one of the FBI’s top criminal
priorities. It is often a multilayered scheme that extends much further from
our elected officials,” said Matthew J. DeSarno, Special Agent in Charge of the
FBI Dallas Field Office. “We are committed to investigating all levels of these
deceptive schemes, including individuals like Mr. Scroggins who facilitate
bribes.”
In plea papers, Mr. Scroggins, the owner of nonprofit Hip
Hop Government (HHG), admits that Mr. Hamilton repeatedly wrote checks payable
to Mr. Scroggins or HH, but these payments were generally meant for Ms.
Davis.
Mr. Scroggins – who knew the payments were intended to
influence the councilwoman’s official actions on Mr. Hamilton’s housing
projects – admits that he cashed Mr. Hamilton’s checks and transferred the
funds to Ms. Davis in cash without alerting authorities.
The late Ms. Davis pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit
bribery in March and was set to be sentenced September 20. Mr. Hamilton was
charged with bribery in February, and has entered a plea of not guilty. Like
all defendants, Mr. Hamilton is presumed innocent until proven guilty in a
court of law. His trial is slated for January 6, 2020.
“We were shocked to hear of Ms. Davis’ tragic passing, and
our sympathies go out to her family, friends, and former constituents,” said
U.S. Attorney Nealy Cox. “Ms. Davis took responsibility for her conduct and she
never wavered in her desire to make things right. We are confident justice will
be served in all our public corruption cases.”
The Federal Bureau of Investigation conducted the
investigation with assistance from the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal
Investigations. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Marcus Busch, Andrew Wirmani, and Chad
Meacham are prosecuting the case.
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