NEW ORLEANS – U.S.
Attorney Peter G. Strasser announced that NICHOLAS ROTUNDA ALLEN, age 39, an
inmate in Jimmy Autry State Prison in Pelham, Georgia, was sentenced to 12
months in prison, to be served consecutively to his state sentence in an
unrelated matter, restitution to “Victim A” in the amount of $5,500, supervised
release for 3 years, and payment of a $100 special assessment fee by United
States District Judge Martin L.C. Feldman after previously pleading guilty to
conspiracy to commit wire fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C. ' 371, for his role
in perpetrating a grand jury fraud scam and victimizing a resident of the
Eastern District of Louisiana.
According to court documents, ALLEN was sentenced to a
period of incarceration as part of a felony conviction on February 22, 2016 in
the State of Georgia. He began serving
his sentence at Jimmy Autry State Prison, a Georgia Department of Correction
facility located in Pelham, Georgia, on about March 30, 2016. Jimmy Autry State Prison housed approximately
1,700 adult male inmates and had approximately 119 correctional officers
employed by the Georgia Department of Corrections overseeing them. In about 2016, several inmates and
correctional officers at Jimmy Autry State Prison were the subject of a series
of federal prosecutions related to a scheme by which inmates bribed
correctional officers to smuggle contraband, namely cellular phones, into the
prison.
On November 6, 2017, and November 7, 2017, ALLEN used a
contraband cellular telephone to contact Victim A, a resident of Metairie,
Louisiana, from inside the state prison.
Although he was not permitted to have a phone inside the jail, ALLEN
obtained the phone from a non-incarcerated co-conspirator. The cellular telephone ALLEN used was
associated with two Georgia-based phone numbers, but he attempted to avoid
detection and make it appear as though he was located within the New Orleans
area by utilizing a “spoofing” application that made it appear to Victim A that
someone with a local phone number, (504) XXX-5237, was contacting him.
ALLEN pretended to be a Deputy United States Marshal and
informed Victim A that he had unlawfully failed to report for jury duty service
for the United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Louisiana. ALLEN further told Victim A
that because he had failed to appear for jury duty, a warrant had been issued
out of the Eastern District of Louisiana for Victim A’s arrest. ALLEN said that Victim A had the choice of
either being arrested on the warrant or paying a $5,500 fine to have the arrest
warrant dismissed. Victim A paid the fine by buying a series of pre-paid cash
cards and giving the account numbers to ALLEN.
Thereafter, Victim A paid ALLEN by buying a total of eleven (11)
pre-paid cash cards and giving the cards’ account numbers to ALLEN.
U.S. Attorney Strasser praised the work of the United States
Marshal Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant United States Attorney Jordan
Ginsberg, Supervisor of the Public Corruption Unit, is in charge of the
prosecution.
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