A Texas woman who managed aspects of an international
program at an Ohio-based adoption agency pleaded guilty today for her role in a
scheme to corruptly facilitate adoptions of Ugandan children through bribing
Ugandan officials and defrauding U.S. adoptive parents and the U.S. Department
of State.
Robin Longoria, 58, of Mansfield, Texas, pleaded guilty
before U.S. Magistrate Judge William H. Baughman, Jr. of the Northern District
of Ohio to one count of conspiracy to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act
(FCPA), to commit wire fraud and to commit visa fraud. Sentencing is scheduled for January 8, 2020,
before U.S. District Judge Christopher A. Boyko of the Northern District of
Ohio.
“The defendant compromised protections for vulnerable
Ugandan children and undermined the United States’ visa screening process,”
said Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division. “Today’s
plea ensures that she is held accountable for the far-reaching consequences of
her corrupt conduct.”
“This defendant has admitted to playing a part in a
conspiracy in which judges and other court officials in Africa were paid bribes
to corrupt the adoption process,” said U.S. Attorney Justin Herdman of the
Northern District of Ohio. “We are
committed to pursuing justice for the adoptive parents and for all parties
involved.”
“While adoptive families were financially and emotionally
invested in the welfare of their future child, misrepresentations were made by
Ms. Longoria and others to disguise bribe payments made to court officials in
Uganda,” said Special Agent in Charge Eric B. Smith of the FBI’s Cleveland
Field Office. “We are pleased Ms.
Longoria has accepted responsibility for her role in facilitating an
international adoption scam.”
As part of her guilty plea, Longoria admitted, among other
things, that she and her co-conspirators agreed to, and did, cause bribes
disquised as fees to be paid to an Uganda Agent. Longoria knew that these fees
would and were used by the to pay bribes to court registrars and Ugandan High
Court judges to corruptly influence the court registrars to assign particular
cases to “adoption-friendly” judges and to corruptly influence the judges to
grant the U.S. clients of the adoption agency the authority to bring the
Ugandan children to the United States for the purpose of adoption. Longoria also admitted that she and her
co-conspirators agreed to, and did, conceal these bribes from the adoption
agency’s U.S. clients. Further, Longoria
admitted that she and her co-conspirators agreed to, and did, create false
documents for submission to the U.S. State Department to mislead it in its
adjudication of visa applications for the Ugandan children being considered for
adoption.
If you believe you are a victim of this offense, please
visit https://www.justice.gov/criminal-fraud/victim-witness-program or call
(888) 549-3945.
The FBI’s Cleveland Field Office is investigating the
case. Assistant U.S. Attorney Chelsea
Rice and Trial Attorney Jason Manning of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section
are prosecuting the case.
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