CAMDEN, N.J. – A McKinney, Texas, man was sentenced today to
15 months in prison for conspiring to launder $200,000, which he believed was
derived from the sale of narcotics, U.S. Attorney Craig Carpenito announced.
John Eckerd, 55, previously pleaded guilty before U.S.
District Court Judge Renee Marie Bumb to an information charging him with one
count of conspiracy to launder money. Judge Bumb imposed the sentence today in
Camden federal court.
Eckerd’s conspirator, Anthony Romano, 53, of Springfield, New
Jersey, was sentenced by Judge Bumb on Sept. 26, 2019, to 54 months in prison
for his role in conspiring to launder over $590,000 in United States
currency.
According to documents filed in this case and statements
made in court:
Between September 2017 and December 2017, Romano engaged in
10 separate money laundering transactions with an undercover agent. The agent
and Romano met at various locations in Atlantic County, New Jersey, to discuss
ways to conceal the origin of the money and to exchange the cash. Romano
received bags of cash ranging in amounts of $10,000 to $60,000. The undercover agent represented to both
Romano and Eckerd that the cash was derived from selling drugs on behalf of a
South American drug cartel.
In exchange for the cash, Romano provided the agent with
various business checks, less a fee that Romano charged for performing the
illegal transaction. Several business checks were from shell companies that
Romano formed in order to conceal and disguise the nature of the transaction.
Twenty days after Romano’s initial meeting with the
undercover agent, Romano spoke to the agent about laundering larger sums of
cash through an associate – Eckerd – in Texas. At the time, Eckerd was
allegedly building a high-end underground residential bunker development
outside of Dallas. The development project was marketed as a five-star doomsday
escape for the wealthy with DEFCON 1 preparedness and allegedly capable of
withstanding catastrophic events ranging from viral epidemics to nuclear war. Through
this development project, it was represented to the undercover agent that
Eckerd could launder larger amounts of cash without risking the scrutiny of law
enforcement.
By January 2018,
Romano and Eckerd were prepared to escalate the monetary amounts involved in
the laundering activity. The first transaction of 2018 involving Romano, Eckerd
and the undercover agent served as a test case to show the supposed members of
the South American drug cartel that Romano and Eckerd could expeditiously launder
larger sums of cash. In January 2018, the undercover agent handed Romano
$100,000 in cash at a location in New Jersey.
Instead of receiving a business check in return, the undercover agent
agreed to receive the money, less the standard fee, in the form of a wire
transaction originating from Eckerd.
The following month, the undercover agent met with Romano
and Eckerd in Texas to engage in a second test case. The day after driving out
to the site of the development project, the undercover agent turned over a
backpack containing $100,000 in cash to Romano and Eckerd. In exchange, Eckerd handed the undercover
agent a check, less their standard fee for laundering the alleged narcotics
proceeds.
In addition to pleading guilty to the conspiracy to launder
money charge, Romano also admitted his participation in planning a robbery of
The Pawn Shop in Union, New Jersey on April 19, 2014. Romano acknowledged
knowing that his conspirators in that case had access to a firearm when they
committed the robbery.
In addition to the prison term, Judge Bumb sentenced Eckerd
and Romano each to three years of supervised release.
U.S. Attorney Carpenito credited special agents of the FBI,
under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Gregory W. Ehrie in Newark, and
detectives from the Union County Prosecutor’s Office, under the direction of
Acting Prosecutor Lyndsay V. Ruotolo, with the investigation leading to the
sentencings.
The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorney
Mary E. Toscano, Deputy Chief of the Criminal Division, and Assistant U.S.
Attorney Thomas S. Kearney of the U.S Attorney’s Office Criminal Division in
Newark.
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