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GREENSBORO, NC — A federal grand jury in Greensboro has charged ERNEST
HAROLD PITT, THOMAS PARRISH TROLLINGER, and JAMES REID LAWRENCE, in a scheme
to defraud the Housing Authority of the City of Winston-Salem, NC (“HAWS”),
announced U.S. Attorney Anna Mills Wagoner for the Middle District of North
Carolina today.
The 10-count indictment, returned Tuesday August 26, 2008, alleges that the
defendants acted to defraud HAWS by having it loan $414,000 to Forsyth Economic
Ventures, Inc. (“FEV”), for the purchase of property (23 lots
in the Lansing Ridge Subdivision) owned by East Pointe Developers, LLC (“EPD”),
without disclosing to HAWS the financial interests of PITT and TROLLINGER
in EPD, and without the knowledge or approval of the HAWS Board of Commissioners
(“HAWSBOC”) or the FEV Board of Directors. At the time of the
transaction, PITT and TROLLINGER were the sole managers of EPD, directed
its operations and received the profits from it. PITT was also Chairman of
the HAWSBOC and President of FEV. LAWRENCE was Executive Director of HAWS
and Vice President of FEV. The indictment alleges that PITT and TROLLINGER
each received $84,000 as a result of the transaction. PITT and LAWRENCE thereafter
obtained a bank loan in the amount of $414,000 on behalf of FEV to repay
HAWS, again without the knowledge or approval of the HAWSBOC and the FEV
Board of Directors.
If convicted of the allegations in Count One of the Indictment, the defendants
face a maximum of 20 years in prison. If convicted of mail fraud as alleged
in Counts Six and Seven, the defendants also face a maximum of 20 years in
prison. The money laundering charges contained in Counts Two through Five
against PITT (2, 3, 4) and TROLLINGER (2, 5) carry a maximum 10 year prison
sentence. LAWRENCE is charged in Counts Eight and Nine with making materially
false statements during the ensuing investigation. TROLLINGER is also charged,
in Count Ten, with making materially false statements during the investigation
of the transaction. If convicted of Counts Eight, Nine or Ten, those defendants
face up to 5 years in prison. Conviction of any of the counts in the Indictment
may also result in imposition of a $250,000 fine.
The charges in this indictment are the result of an investigation conducted
by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Department of Housing and Urban
Development (HUD) - Office of Inspector General.
An indictment is not evidence of guilt. All persons charged with a crime
are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt |