Tag Archive for 'U.S. District Court'

Arguments heard in fen-phen case

- bortiz@herald-leader.com

FRANKFORT — Opening statements were under way in the retrial of two Lexington area lawyers accused of taking $94 million that should have gone to 440 clients, who had sued the maker of the diet drug fen-phen.

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Shirley Cunningham Jr. (left), William Gallion (right)

Lawyers for the federal government and the defendants, Shirley Cunningham Jr. and William Gallion, made small tweaks to their case from a trial last summer, which resulted in a hung jury and a mistrial. Another defendant, Melbourne Mills, was acquitted.

Cunningham and Gallion are accused of conspiracy and wire fraud over the 2001 settlement of a lawsuit against the maker of the fen-phen diet drug. fen-phen, which was recalled after some studies indicated it could cause heart damage. The lawsuit was settled for $200 million.

As they laid out their case Wednesday in U.S. District Court, prosecutors spent more time explaining class-action law — a subject that many lawyers find difficult to understand.

Prosecutors say Cunningham and Gallion — and their staff — disregarded ethics rules by refusing to disclose the gross amount of the settlement to their clients, paying them less than they were entitled to under the settlement, and falsely telling clients that they would go to jail if they told anyone what they received, Assistant U.S. Attorney Laura Voorhees.

The lawyers used the settlement-confidentiality clause to keep their clients in the dark, Voorhees said.

“They used this provision like it was a club,” she said.

Under their contracts with clients, Cunningham and Gallion were entitled to one-third of the settlement. They took nearly half of it, Voorhees said.

The lawyers also are accused of wrongfully diverting $20 million of the settlement into a charitable trust. During the first trial, the defense argued that that money was needed to pay future fen-phen victims who were not in the lawsuit. Defense attorneys said that, according to the settlement agreement, Cunningham and Gallion were personally liable for paying those clients.

But Voorhees, anticipating such arguments Wednesday, said the settlement agreement limited the lawyers’ liability to $7.5 million.

O. Hale Almand, an attorney for Gallion, said his client followed the advice and recommendations of well-known Cincinnati trial lawyer Stan Chesley, who negotiated the settlement. Almand also noted that the trial judge approved the attorneys fees.

Almand said the lawyers never intended to defraud their clients. The charitable trust was approved by an independent attorney who was hired by the court to write a legal opinion of it.

Cunningham’s lawyer was expected to make his opening statements at 1 p.m.

The trial could last six weeks.

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Lexington shop owner sentenced to six years for money laundering

Herald-Leader Staff Report

A Lexington man was sentenced Friday to six years in prison for laundering money for a $60 million organized retail theft ring. Abduhl Sulaiman, 47, owned the Stop N Shop Discount Food on Winburn Drive in Lexington.

Federal prosecutors say he cashed checks for a retail theft ring organized by a Louisville business called Alpha Trading, which allegedly dealt in stolen baby formula and health and beauty products.

In June, a federal jury in Lexington convicted Sulaiman of money laundering, conspiracy and failure to file currency transaction reports.

Sulaiman was sentenced by Judge Jennifer Coffman on Friday at a hearing in U.S. District Court in Lexington.

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Three plead guilty in Harrison, Pendleton bank robberies

By Becky Barnes

Three of the five individuals accused of robbing or being accomplices to area bank robberies have entered guilty pleas to their charges. The remaining two will be on trial next week.

On Friday, Nov. 26, Jeffrey Allen Pratt, 30, pleaded guilty to two central Kentucky bank robberies in U.S. District Court in Lexington.

Read more in the Cynthiana Democrat.

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Judge: Clear Ky. record of former death row inmate

LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) — A federal judge has ordered Kentucky to expunge the record of a man who was once on Death Row.

U.S. District Judge Danny C. Reeves’s order on Thursday clears the record of 62-year-old Eugene Williams Gall in the kidnapping, rape and death of 12-year-old Lisa Jansen in 1978.

A federal appeals court overturned Gall’s conviction in 2001 saying prosecutors failed to prove key elements of the case and that the prohibition against double jeopardy forbade a retrial.

Kentucky turned Gall over to Ohio, where he is serving a life sentence for rape and murder.

Gall’s attorney, public defender Tim Arnold, says the decision may make it easier for him to argue for parole in 2021. A message left with the Montgomery County, Ohio, prosecutor’s office, was not immediately returned Friday.

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Man pleads guilty in murder-for-hire plot

LONDON, Ky. — A Knox County man pleaded guilty today for his part in a murder-for-hire scheme.

Bill Perkins, 42, pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges. He admitted that in June he tried to help his brother, who was a Whitely County jail inmate, arrange a hit on a witness in a drug-trafficking case against him, according to a press release from the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Kentucky.

Perkins admitted he gave a $500 down payment and a .22-caliber rifle to a cooperating witness. His jailed brother, Randall Perkins, had promised $4,000 and a car if the man killed the witness.

The cooperating witness worked with authorities to stage a murder scene and showed a picture of it to Randall Perkins on his cell phone.

From jail, he called his brother and told him to make a check out to the witness for “building a garage.” A search later revealed a receipt, according to the press release.

Bill Perkins is scheduled for sentencing on March 12 in U.S. District Court in Lexington. He faces a maximum sentence of 10 years and a $250,000 release.

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Man sentenced to 30 years for making child porn

Herald-Leader Staff Report

A Lexington man who has admitted to producing child pornography was sentenced to 30 years in prison on Thursday, the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Lexington said.

John Charles Johnson, 38, of Lexington, pleaded guilty in July of photographing a 10-year-old girl engaging in sexually explicit conduct in November 2006.

A federal judge sentenced Johnson to 30 years on Thursday in U.S. District Court in Lexington.

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Parents sue in daughter’s beating at Louisa school

By Cassondra Kirby-Mullins
ckirby@herald-leader.com

Parents of a Lawrence County High school student have filed a lawsuit alleging that school officials did not protect their 17-year-old daughter, who was severely beaten at the school in August.

Jerry and Melissa Moore say they repeatedly warned school officials that their daughter, Jerica, had been threatened by another student, according to he lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Ashland.

Specifically, Jerry Moore, the girl’s father, went to the school on Aug. 11 and spoke with James Boggs, the school’s principal, after Jerica received a message that “an attack was coming,” the lawsuit says. That same day, the principal was also given a copy of a handwritten letter which indicated that the juvenile was going to attack Jerica.

Boggs and Debra Delong, the assistant principal, had assured the Moores “that appropriate protection measures were in place,” according to the lawsuit.

However, on August 12, the juvenile brutally attacked Jerica on school property, punching her and hitting her in the back of the head with a glass candle stick holder.

The juvenile attacker was not named in the lawsuit.

Jerica’s wounds were so deep that doctors placed staples in the back of her head. The family incurred $10,000 in medical expenses, the lawsuit says.

Jerica “has experienced and will likely continue to experience pain and suffering,” according to the lawsuit which names Boggs, Delong and the Lawrence County Board of Education.

The Moores are seeking a jury trial and asking for compensation for their child’s past and future pain and suffering and for attorneys’ fees.

Neither Boggs nor Delong could be immediately reached for comment.

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New information in the Ana Romero case

An update from Franklin County Coroner Will Harrod who is trying to determine the cause and manner of death of a Salvadoran immigrant who was in the Franklin County Regional Jail waiting for deportation:

Harrod said Tuesday that because he was called to the Frankfort Regional Medical Center and therefore did not have a chance to investigate the Franklin County Jail scene that led to Ana Romero Rivera’s death, he will issue a coroner’s subpoena for Kentucky State Police records and any photographs KSP officers took at jail or the hospital.

Harrod said Tuesday he will review Kentucky State Police officers have interviewed at the Franklin County jail. Romero, 44, had been placed in isolation for not eating just prior to her death.

A preliminary autopsy report from the state chief medical examiner’s office shows that Romero died of asphyxia by hanging. Kentucky State Police officials are investigating the death as a suicide

According to a dispatch transcript from the Frankfort Police Department, obtained through an open records request, staff at the jail made a 911 call about 11:15 p.m. Aug. 21, requesting an ambulance for Romero because she was not breathing and a CPR unit was assisting. At 11:19 p.m., “jail staff advised she hung herself and was not breathing.”

The medical examiner’s report says the jail sent Romero to the Frankfort Regional Medical Center late Aug. 21. Harrod pronounced Romero dead about 2:40 a.m. Aug. 22.

Meanwhile, Franklin Commonwealth’s Attorney Larry Cleveland said last week that he will review the Kentucky State Police investigation to see whether further action is warranted. Cleveland has the power to ask a grand jury to investigate the death.

Members of Congress have recently demanded that more information be released about the deaths of at least 71 illegal immigrants who have died in U.S. custody since 2004 while awaiting deportation.

ICE officials responded to stories in the New York Times and Washington Post.

– Valarie Honeycutt Spears

What would have happened to Ana Romero had she not apparently committed suicide in the Franklin County jail?

Romero was in the Franklin jail, but technically in the custody of the U.S. Marshals after pleading guilty to immigration fraud. On Aug. 22, she was going to be transferred to ICE custody for deportation. She was found in an isolation cell on the night of Aug. 21.

It is impossible to say for sure what would have happened next, but spokespersons with Immigration and Customs Enforcement said via e-mail and in a phone interview that Romero would not have remained in the jail. Once in ICE custody, she probably would have been transported to one of the four county jails in Illinois or southern Wisconsin that the Chicago ICE office uses.

From there, it is hard to say how long it would have taken for Romero to be deported. Several factors such as whether she would have waived the right to see an immigration judge, whether she had proper travel documents to return to El Salvador and when the next ICE-arranged flight to El Salvador is scheduled.

– Steve Lannen

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Fayette man faces child porn charges

By Steve Lannen
slannen@herald-leader.com

A Fayette County man faces federal child pornography charges.

David M. Allen

David M. Allen

David Martin Allen, 36, was indicted by a U.S. District Court grand jury on charges of attempting to receive child pornography and possession of child pornography.

The U. S. Attorney and United States Postal Inspection Service conducted the investigation. If convicted, he could face as much as 20 years in prison, according to a U.S. District Attorney’s press release.

The indictment alleges that Allen possessed material depicting minors engaging in sexually explicit conduct. He is also charged with attempting to receive material minors in sexually explicit conduct from December 2005 through April 2007.

Allen also faces numerous charges in Fayette Circuit Court for sexual abuse, sodomy and the use of a minor in a sexual performance.
 

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Man gets 30 months for contraband Ky. cigarettes

By Brandon Ortiz
bortiz@herald-leader.com

A Chicago man who admitted to buying 455,000 packs of cigarettes in Kentucky and illegally reselling them in Chicago and New York, which have higher tobacco taxes, was sentenced to 30 months in prison Monday.

Howard J. Mui

Howard J. Mui

Howard J. Mui, 42, bought about 9 million cigarettes in Madison and Fayette counties from December 2005 to January 2008. He bought them in Kentucky because it has one of the lowest cigarette taxes in the nation at 30 cents a pack.

Mui then resold the cigarettes in Chicago’s “Chinatown,” which has a $3.66 a pack tax, and in New York, where the tax is $4.25. The illegal business netted Mui $1.27 million, according to court records.

Mui did not remit the applicable taxes to Illinois and New York local and state governments, which is a crime.

“I guess the temptation (for profit) was too much,” said his attorney, Ned Pillersdorf.

In May, Mui pleaded guilty to transporting, receiving, possessing and purchasing 10,000 or more contraband cigarettes without paying the state and local cigarette taxes. Mui also pleaded guilty to knowingly possessing counterfeit cigarette tax stamps.

Kyle Edelen, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Lexington, called it “one of the biggest cases (of contraband cigarettes) we’ve had.”

Mui admitted his wrongdoing to U.S. District Judge Joseph Hood. He asked for probation because he said he’s willing to cooperate with the federal government in future prosecutions.

Hood sentenced Mui to 30 months but said prosecutors could come back within 12 months and ask for a more lenient penalty if Mui cooperates.

But prosecutors said in court Monday that they had met with Mui twice and that he wasn’t helpful.

Mui was ordered to repay $492,543.80 in lost taxes to Illinois; $876,620 to Cook County, Ill.; $298,050.80 to Chicago; $25,200 to New York State, and $25,200 to New York City.

Mui also has to repay $30,000 to the state of Michigan and $31,185 to Kentucky for counterfeit cigarette tax stamps.

Hood fined Mui $1.27 million for the illegal proceeds from the cigarette business.

Mui’s wife, Pei Yi Mui, also was charged. Her case is pending.

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