Fayetteville, Arkansas – Former Arkansas State Senator
Jeremy Hutchinson pleaded guilty today before U.S. District Judge Kristine G.
Baker to accepting multiple bribes and tax fraud in connection with a
multi-district investigation spanning the Western and Eastern Districts of
Arkansas and the Western District of Missouri.
U.S. Attorney Duane (DAK) Kees for the Western District of
Arkansas, Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Cody Hiland for the Eastern
District of Arkansas and U.S. Attorney Timothy A. Garrison for the Western
District of Missouri, made the announcement.
Hutchinson, 45, of Little Rock, Arkansas, was previously a
state senator and representative prior to resigning after he was charged in the
Eastern District of Arkansas to a 12-count federal grand jury indictment with
eight counts of wire fraud and four counts of filing false tax returns. The
indictment alleges that from 2010 through 2017, Hutchinson stole and
misappropriated thousands of dollars in state campaign contributions for his
own personal use and then filed false federal income tax returns from 2011 to
2014 to conceal his conduct. Hutchinson
was also previously charged, in a 32-count federal grand jury indictment, in
the Western District of Missouri, for his role in a multi-million-dollar public
corruption scheme that involved embezzlement, bribes and illegal campaign
contributions for elected public officials. Pursuant to his plea agreement,
Hutchinson agreed to plead guilty to Count 1 of the Western District of
Missouri superseding indictment, charging him with conspiracy to commit federal
program bribery; Count 9 of the Eastern District of Arkansas indictment,
charging him with filing a false tax return; and to an information filed in the
Western District of Arkansas, charging him with conspiracy to commit federal
program bribery.
As part of his plea, Hutchinson admitted that he was hired
by an unidentified individual as outside counsel, and in exchange for payments
and legal work, Hutchinson pushed legislation beneficial to that individual.
Hutchinson admitted that he was provided legal work to conceal the corrupt
nature of his arrangement and that he would have never been hired if not for
his position as an elected official. Hutchinson further admitted as part of his
plea that in 2011, he stole over $10,000 in state campaign funds for his own
personal use and also falsified his 2011 tax returns, including failing to
report $20,000-per-month-payments he received from one law firm and other
sources of income he knowingly and intentionally concealed from his taxes.
Count 1 of the Western District of Missouri superseding
indictment, which Hutchinson, pursuant to his plea agreement, is expected to
plead guilty to after today’s hearing before Judge Baker, alleges that
Hutchinson and other elected officials accepted bribes in the form of monthly
legal retainers and other things of value, from employees and executives of
Preferred Family Healthcare Inc. (formerly known as Alternative Opportunities
Inc.), a Springfield, Missouri-based, healthcare charity. In exchange for the
bribes, Hutchinson and other elected officials allegedly provided favorable
legislative and official action for the charity, including directing funds from
Arkansas’s General Improvement Fund (GIF).
“As I have indicated previously, the investigation into the
rampant pay to play corruption scheme present in our state capitol is ongoing,’
said the United States Attorney for the Western District of Arkansas, Duane DAK
Kees, “This plea represents a serious watershed in exposing this use of sham
retainers and consulting arrangements to influence the passage of law. The previous pleas and convictions uncovered
the use of these arrangements in the distribution of GIF funds, youth lock-up
facilities, and Medicaid expansion, but this revelation makes clear that it
affected far more than that. The
unprecedented cooperation between the two districts of the State of Arkansas,
the Western District of Missouri, and the Public Integrity Section of the
Department of Justice has brought the necessary resources to bear to bring this
troubling conduct into deserving public scrutiny.”
The multi-district investigation was conducted by the FBI,
IRS Criminal Investigations, and the Offices of the Inspectors General from the
Departments of Justice, Labor, and the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
(FDIC). The cases are being prosecuted
by Trial Attorneys Marco A. Palmieri and Sean F. Mulryne of the Criminal
Division’s Public Integrity Section; Assistant U.S. Attorneys Stephanie Mazzanti
and Patrick Harris from the Eastern District of Arkansas; Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Ben Wulff and Aaron Jennen of the Western District of Arkansas; and
Steven M. Mohlhenrich of the Western District of Missouri.
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