New Charges in Superseding Indictment Include Burglary,
Abusive Sexual Contact, Witness Tampering
Jackson, Miss. – A former member of the Tribal Council for
the Mississippi Band of Choctaw Indians has been charged with additional
criminal violations in a Superseding Indictment and arrested for burglary,
sexual abusive contact, witness tampering, theft/embezzlement, and wire fraud,
announced United States Attorney Mike Hurst and Michelle A. Sutphin, Special
Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in Mississippi.
An original indictment returned by a federal grand jury on
February 6, 2019, had charged the former elected lawmaker Randy Lamar Anderson,
46, of Conehatta, Miss., with defrauding the Tribal government (One count of
theft and two counts of wire fraud).
According to the indictment, between March 2015 and December
2017, Anderson is alleged to have forged hotel bills and receipts, and
submitted those documents to the Tribal government in claims for reimbursement
for official business travel. Since the
original indictment issued, Anderson’s term on the Tribal Council expired, and
Anderson did not run for reelection to the Council.
On February 13, 2019, Anderson appeared for arraignment on
the original indictment before United States Magistrate Judge Linda R. Anderson
in Jackson, Mississippi. The Court
released Anderson on bond, subject to conditions including that he refrain from
further violations of state or federal law while awaiting his trial.
On November 6, 2019, additional charges were returned by a
Federal Grand Jury in a Superseding Indictment, alleging that Anderson, while
subject to the conditions of his release on bond, entered the home of a female
Choctaw Indian on Reservation lands during the night of August 25, 2019, and
committed an abusive sexual contact of the woman, who was unable to appraise
the nature of the conduct and physically incapable of declining participation
in, or communicating unwillingness to engage in, that sexual act. The Superseding Indictment also alleges that
in the days following the incident in August and September, Anderson engaged in
witness tampering by attempting to intimidate and threaten the victim into not
reporting his offense and violations of his bond conditions, as well as
attempting to corruptly persuade and mislead the Choctaw Police Department into
pressing criminal charges against her, to dissuade her from filing charges.
Anderson appeared before United States Magistrate Judge
Linda R. Anderson for arraignment on the Superseding Indictment today in
Jackson. He faces maximum penalties of 5 years in prison for theft from an
Indian Tribal Organization; 20 years for each count of Wire Fraud; a mandatory
minimum of three years for Burglary, with a maximum of 25 years; a maximum of
15 years for Abusive Sexual Contact; and up to 30 years for each count of
Witness Tampering. Each count also can
merit a fine of up to $250,000. Anderson
was remanded to the custody of the U.S. Marshals to await a detention hearing
scheduled for Tuesday, November 19, 2019.
U.S. Attorney Hurst commended the work of the Special Agents
with the FBI’s Jackson Division who investigated the case. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant
United States Attorney Theodore Cooperstein.
The public is reminded that an indictment is merely a charge
and should not be considered as evidence of guilt. The defendant is presumed
innocent until proven guilty in a court of law.
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