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U.S. Department of Justice
United States John
L. Ratcliff
Northern District
of Texas
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
CONTACT:KATHY COLVIN
October 18, 2007
WWW.USDOJ.GOV/USAO/TXN
PHONE: (214) 659-8600
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LUBBOCK, TEXAS,
BUSINESSMAN SENTENCED TO MORE
THAN FIVE YEARS IN FEDERAL PRISON, WITHOUT PAROLE, FOR
DEFRAUDING EMPLOYER OF MORE THAN $2 MILLION
LUBBOCK, Texas -
Donovan Frank Laughlin, a former General Manager at Wool Growers Central
Storage Co., Inc., was sentenced to 63 months in prison, announced U.S.
Attorney Richard B. Roper of the Northern District of Texas. U.S. District
Judge Sam R. Cummings also ordered that Laughlin, also known as Donnie
Laughlin, pay $2,072,326 in restitution. He must surrender to the Bureau
of Prisons on November 16, 2007.
Laughlin, 60, pled
guilty in May to an Information charging one count of engaging in monetary
transactions in property derived from specified unlawful activity (money
laundering). He had worked as the General Manager at Wool Growers Central
Storage Co., Inc., in Ozona, Texas, since 1991.
Wool Growers operated
warehouses that stored mohair and wool until it could be sold. It also
acted as an agent and fiduciary for mohair and wool producers. If a producer
agreed to sell at an offered price, then Wool Growers collected the sales
price, deducted storage and commission costs, and then paid the balance
to the producer whose mohair or wool had been sold. Wool Growers, which
had mohair and wool storage warehouses in Ozona and Sanderson, Texas,
also had a retail business that sold farm and ranch supplies
Laughlin admitted that from March 2000 until late May 2006, he carried
out a scheme to defraud Wool Growers by selling their mohair and wool
and not paying the producers/owners monies to which they were entitled.
While Laughlin did conduct legitimate sales at the direction of an owner/producer,
he used that apparent authority, without the knowledge of the owner/producers,
to arrange the sale of mohair or wool in storage at Wool Growers.
Instead of deducting storage and commissions from these sales and paying
over the balance to the owner/producer of the mohair or wool that was
sold, Laughlin would either keep the money himself, or after payment was
received by wire transfer or check, transfer the sales proceeds from the
mohair/wools sales bank account to the Wool Growers retail business bank
account. Then once
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the money from the fraudulent sales had been transferred and deposited
into the Wool Growers retail business bank account, those monies would
be used for regular business expenses of the Wool Growers retail business
or were fraudulently taken by Laughlin, often in the form of unauthorized
additional salary checks and cash.
Laughlin transferred approximately $2,072,326.56 to the business checking
account. This amount represents the proceeds of the scheme to defraud
and money paid by the buyers of mohair and wool for the unauthorized sales.
The other monies from the fraudulent sales, once transferred to the business
checking account, were used for the ordinary business expenses of Wool
Growers retail business. As the general manager, Laughlin benefitted from
these payments because they made the retail business appear to be more
successful and ensure that his position and authority at Wool Growers
would continue.
U.S. Attorney Roper commended the investigative efforts of Texas Rangers
and the FBI. The case was prosecuted by Deputy Criminal Chief Denise Williams
of the Lubbock, Texas, U.S. Attorney's Office.
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