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FORMER
U.S. ATTORNEY SENTENCED Currin Will
Serve 70 months in Federal Prison CHARLOTTE, N.C. -- United States
Attorney Gretchen C.F. Shappert of the Western District of North
Carolina, Nathan Thomas Gray, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Operations
in North Carolina, and Charles Hunter, Special Agent in Charge of
the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Division, announced
that SAMUEL T. CURRIN, 58, of Raleigh, North Carolina, and formerly
the United States Attorney for the Eastern District of North Carolina
(1981-87) and a North Carolina Superior Court Judge (1987-90), was
sentenced yesterday to 70 months in federal prison as a result of
his guilty pleas to charges of: (a) conspiring to launder through
his law firm's client trust account approximately $1.35 million
in proceeds from a massive securities fraud scheme, (b) obstructing
the grand jury's investigation of that securities fraud and money
laundering scheme, and (c) obstructing the functions of the IRS
by failing to disclose on his tax return an off-shore debit card
account he controlled in which thousands of dollars were deposited.
According to
a Bill of Information in which CURRIN was charged and to which he
entered a guilty plea, a group of individuals, including one of
CURRIN's law firm clients, engaged in a massive scheme to fraudulently
manipulate the stock prices of several publicly-traded companies
through the use of spam e-mail, mass unsolicited facsimiles, Internet
search optimization, and voice mail broadcasting. Tens of millions
of dollars in proceeds resulted from this scheme. The Bill of Information
charged that CURRIN conspired with others to launder the proceeds
of this securities fraud scheme through his law firm's trust accounts.
The Bill of Information charged, and CURRIN admitted, that CURRIN
received in excess of $280,000 as a result of his role in this conspiracy.
Also in the
Bill of Information it was charged that CURRIN formed an Anguillan
company and opened a debit card account in the name of that company
at a foreign bank. CURRIN then received thousands of dollars into
that account but failed to disclose either the account or the income
deposited therein on his 2004 federal individual income tax return.
In a separate
Bill of Indictment, the charges included information that in December
2005, CURRIN was subpoenaed to testify before a grand jury investigating
the above-described securities fraud and money laundering scheme.
Prior to his appearance before the grand jury, CURRIN conspired
with Raleigh attorney R. Shawn Wellons to withhold documents from
and provide false testimony to the grand jury regarding the possession
of certain documents. As agreed, CURRIN and Wellons then appeared
before the grand jury and each gave perjured testimony in response
to questions posed to them. Among other things, CURRIN falsely denied
having any off-shore business dealings.
U.S. Attorney
Shappert credits the FBI and IRS-CID with leading the investigation,
and the Securities & Exchange Commission for its substantial
assistance in the overall investigation. Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Matthew T. Martens and Kurt W. Meyers of the U.S. Attorney's Criminal
Division in Charlotte handled the case for the government. CURRIN
is represented by Mark T. Calloway, Esq. of Charlotte, North Carolina.
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