TWENTY-TWO DEFENDANTS INDICTED IN CONNECTION WITH ILLEGAL WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA GAMBLING BUSINESSHenderson Amusement, Inc. Owners and Employees and Others Charged in Federal Indictment ASHEVILLE,
NC - Henderson Amusement, Inc., a South Carolina corporation owned by
brothers James Otis Henderson, also known as Jamie Henderson, and Barron
Sloan Henderson, also known as Barry Henderson, with offices in Inman
and Spartanburg, SC, along with a host of employees and others, have been
indicted in U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina
on numerous charges, including conspiring to conduct an illegal gambling
business involving the operation of video poker machines in North Carolina,
in violation of NC law. The federal indictment alleges that the Henderson
brothers, some of their employees, and others, conducted a lucrative illegal
gambling business in the Western District of North Carolina in 15 counties
by making cash payouts on hundreds of video poker machines. According
to the indictment, during the course of the conspiracy, which allegedly
took place from about October 1, 2000 and continued up to the present
time, the illegal gambling business took in more than $5 million in proceeds.
The indictment also alleges that in order to facilitate the illegal gambling
business, the defendants paid money to law enforcement officers for their
Today's announcement is made by United States Attorney Gretchen C.F. Shappert for the Western District of North Carolina; Nathan T. Gray, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) in North Carolina; Charles Hunter, Special Agent in Charge, IRS Criminal Investigations in North and South Carolina; Robin Pendergraft, Director, North Carolina State Bureau of Investigation, and Michael D. Robertson, Director, NC Division of Alcohol Law Enforcement. In addition, substantial assistance in the investigation to date has been provided by the Sheriffs' Offices of Buncombe, Cleveland, and Rutherford Counties and the Police Department of Shelby, North Carolina. James
Otis Henderson,42, of Inman, South Carolina, and Barron S. Henderson,
43, of Lyman, South Carolina, and a total of eleven others have been arrested
on conspiracy and other charges, some of which were initially rolled out
in federal criminal complaints filed on Monday, July 30. The charges in
the bill of indictment filed on Thursday, August 2, supersede the charges
in the various criminal complaints. Eleven of the defendants (22 individuals
have been charged altogether) have been afforded detention hearings today,
conducted by Federal Magistrate Judge Dennis L. Howell of the Western
District of North Carolina at the U.S. Courthouse in Asheville, HENDERSON
AMUSEMENT, INC. The indictment remains sealed as to seven other defendants. Each
defendant is charged in the indictment, filed August 2, 2007 in the Western
District of North Carolina, with one count of conspiracy to conduct an
illegal gambling business. Additionally, each defendant (with the exception
of Defendant Hartness) is charged with unlawfully conducting an illegal
gambling business involving the operation of video poker machines in violation
of North Carolina law. Two defendants, James Henderson and Jeffrey Lee
Childers, are charged with conspiracy to commit bribery and with bribery.
Four defendants, Barron S. Henderson, Harold Steve Hartness, Marty Marvin
Babb, and Michael Ray Elliott, are charged with conspiracy to commit witness
tampering and Barron S. Henderson, Harold Steve Hartness, and Michael
Ray Elliott are charged with witness tampering. Ten of the defendants
are charged with conspiracy to obstruct justice, and 15 of the defendants
are charged with conspiracy to commit money laundering. The conspiracy
counts relating to conducting the illegal gambling business and obstructing
justice each carries a maximum statutory penalty of five years imprisonment
and a $250,000 fine, or both. Conspiracy to commit witness tampering carries
a maximum statutory penalty of ten years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine,
or both. Conspiracy to commit money laundering carries a maximum statutory
penalty of ten years imprisonment and a fine of either $250,000 or twice
the amount of the money laundered. Kathy Stephen, William Brown, Randall
Giles, Marty Marvin Babb, and others are charged with individual counts
alleging grand jury perjury. The indictment includes a Notice of Forfeiture
and Finding of Probable Cause that Defendants Henderson Amusement, Inc.,
James Otis Henderson, Barron Sloan Henderson, Jeffrey Lee Childers, and
Ronnie Eugene Davis forfeit to the United States all of the property involved
in the offenses with which they are charged in the indictment, and all
property traceable to such The
allegations contained in the indictment describe a conspiracy wherein
HENDERSON AMUSEMENT, INC., its owners, employees, and others, conspired
to conduct a large and lucrative illegal gambling business in the Western
District of North Carolina by making cash payouts on hundreds of video
poker machines in violation of the laws of the State of North Carolina.
According to the indictment, HENDERSON AMUSEMENT, INC., JAMES OTIS HENDERSON,
and BARRON SLOAN HENDERSON, operated video poker machines in numerous
Western North Carolina counties beginning by October 1, 2000, and continuing
at least through March 2007. Those counties allegedly involved Buncombe,
Burke, Caldwell, Catawba, Cleveland, Gaston, Haywood, Henderson, Jackson,
Lincoln, Macon, Polk, Rutherford, Swain, and Transylvania Counties, all
of which are situated within the Western District of North Carolina. As
part of the alleged conspiracy, certain HENDERSON employees had the responsibility
of finding new locations ("stores") at which the video poker
machines could be placed, and to negotiate with store owners to establish
what percentage of the net profits the HENDERSONS and the store owners
would each receive. The indictment outlines and alleges an elaborate scheme
under which the gambling business was conducted, which involved the keeping
of careful records as to each "store," regular visits to each
"store" by HENDERSON employees The
case is being investigated by the FBI, the IRS Criminal Investigation
Division, the North Carolina SBI, and the NC Division of Alcohol Law Enforcement,
with cooperation from a number of local Western North Carolina law enforcement
agencies. The prosecution is being The details contained in the indictment are allegations. The defendants are presumed to innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. In a separate, but related indictment, also filed in U.S. District Court in Asheville on Thursday, August 2, Harold Steve Hartness, 58, of Charlotte, has been charged with one count alleging conspiracy to commit witness tampering and three additional counts alleging witness tampering in connection with the investigation conducted by federal and state law enforcement agents and the Federal Grand Jury of the U.S. District Court for the Western District of North Carolina into another illegal gambling business which involved the use of video poker machines. According to the indictment naming Hartness as single defendant, it is alleged that as part of the investigation into an illegal gambling business various witnesses received subpoenas to testify before the Grand Jury, and that Hartness and a co-conspirator met with each of these witnesses and coached them as to the false answers they should give before the Grand Jury. The indictment further alleges that on dates certain, and before the Grand Jury, these subpoenaed witnesses did, in fact, testify falsely about materials facts. If convicted, Hartness faces a maximum statutory penalty of ten years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine, or both, on each of the four counts of the indictment. The details contained in the Hartness indictment are allegations. The defendant is presumed to be innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law. #
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