Richard Luthmann, an attorney licensed by the State of New
York, was sentenced today by United States District Judge Jack B. Weinstein to
four years’ imprisonment for his convictions on one count of wire fraud
conspiracy and one count of extortion conspiracy. Luthmann was also ordered to
pay $500,000 in restitution and $130,000 in forfeiture. Luthmann pleaded guilty to the charges on
March 18, 2019.
Richard P. Donoghue, United States Attorney for the Eastern
District of New York, William F. Sweeney, Jr., Assistant Director-in-Charge,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Field Office (FBI), and Jonathan
Carson, Special Agent-in-Charge, U.S. Department of Commerce, Bureau of
Industry and Security, Office of Export Enforcement, New York Field Office,
announced the sentence.
“With today’s sentence, Luthmann has been held accountable
for using his law practice as a launching pad for his schemes to defraud
businesses in the United States and abroad, and to extort a former client, all
for the purpose of lining his pockets,” stated United States Attorney
Donoghue. Mr. Donoghue extended his
appreciation to the Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations,
the New York City Police Department and the Social Security Administration for
their assistance in the investigation.
“Our legal system works because everyone believes attorneys
are going to be honest brokers of justice.
Mr. Luthmann’s actions, defrauding and extorting his victims, chip away
at the foundations of that system and cannot be tolerated,” stated FBI
Assistant Director-in-
Charge Sweeney. “The
FBI New York Joint Organized Crime Task Force did an outstanding job in this
investigation stopping a criminal who thought he could use his knowledge of the
law to skirt it.”
“This successful prosecution is the result of outstanding
collaborative efforts by the Office of Export Enforcement, the FBI, the Justice
Department and our other law enforcement partners,” stated Department of
Commerce Special Agent-in-Charge Carson.
“Engaging in export fraud scams and falsifying export records are
matters we take seriously. We will
continue to pursue violators who jeopardize fair and secure trade.”
In the summer of 2015, Luthmann and his co-conspirators
formed multiple shell companies, ostensibly to sell scrap metal and recycled
products to U.S. and foreign customers.
Rather than conducting legitimate scrap metal businesses, the
conspirators deceived customers by contracting to sell them scrap metal,
receiving payment on their orders and then intentionally failing to make
delivery of the material. After an
aggrieved customer threatened to report Luthmann and his co-conspirators to the
police, the conspirators changed tactics and began shipping worthless filler
materials, including concrete and road barriers to customers who had contracted
to buy valuable copper and other scrap metal.
In the course of a few months in 2015, Luthmann and his co-conspirators
made more than $500,000 in fraudulent sales.
In an effort to conceal the fraudulent scheme, Luthmann
registered the shell companies with the New York Department of State, recruited
a client of his law practice, who was blind and living on public assistance, to
be the nominal president of one of the shell companies and directed payments
from the fraudulent sales through his law firm’s accounts. Luthmann and his co-conspirators then split
the fraud proceeds at Luthmann’s law office.
In December 2016, Luthmann and his co-conspirators began an
extortion scheme directed at one of his former clients, who had participated in
the scrap metal fraud. Luthmann invited
the former client to meet at his law office in Staten Island, ostensibly to
sign legal paperwork. Luthmann was not
present when the former client arrived, but two of his co-conspirators
were. One of them threatened the former
client with what appeared to be a handgun and demanded the $10,000 owed.
The government’s case is being handled by the Office’s
Organized Crime and Gangs Section.
Assistant United States Attorney James P. McDonald is in charge of the
prosecution.
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