United States Attorney David Capp
Northern District of Indiana
M01-204 S. Main Street
South Bend, Indiana 46601
Hammond South Bend Fort
Wayne
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT:
Mary L. Hatton
November 2, 2012 PHONE:
(219) 937-5500
www.usdoj.gov/usao/inn/ Fax:
(219) 852-2770
WEEK IN REVIEW – SOUTH BEND
South Bend, Indiana - The United States Attorney’s
Office announced that:
PLEAS:
Ø Jeffrey Farmer, 41, of Knox, Indiana, pled guilty before District
Judge Robert Miller, Jr. to the felony offense of accessing with the intent to
view child pornography. Sentencing has
been set for 2/4/13. This case resulted
from an investigation by members of the Indiana Internet Crimes Against Children Task Force, including the U.S. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations and the Starke
County Police Department. This case is
being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney John Maciejczyk.
Ø Timothy Lewis, 41, of South Bend, Indiana, pled guilty
before Magistrate Judge Christopher Nuechterlein to
the felony offenses of distribution of heroin and possession of a firearm in
furtherance of a drug trafficking crime.
Magistrate Nuechterlein is recommending that
the district court accept the tendered guilty plea. Parties have 10 days in which to object to
the magistrate judge’s recommendation.
Sentencing has been set for 2/4/13.
These charges were filed as a result of an investigation by the by the
Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives and the South Bend Police
Department MSOS. This case is being
prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney William Grimmer.
If convicted in
court, any specific sentence to be imposed will be determined by the judge
after a consideration of federal sentencing statutes and the Federal Sentencing
Guidelines.
DISPOSITIONS:
Ø Juan Orduno, 26, of Warsaw, Indiana,
was sentenced by District Judge Robert Miller, Jr. to 12 months imprisonment after
pleading guilty to failure to appear, and 39 months imprisonment after pleading
guilty to possession of ammunition by a convicted felon for a total of 51
months imprisonment. Orduno
will then serve 3 years of supervised release.
According to the sentencing memorandum filed by the court, Orduno was after
throwing bullets into an alley from a moving car in August 2007, when he
already had a felony conviction. Two weeks before trial on that charge, he cut
off his home detention monitoring ankle bracelet and fled. He turned himself in
four years later. Orduno has a prior
felony conviction for operating while intoxicated in 2006. This case was the result of an investigation
by the by the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. This case was prosecuted by Assistant United
States Attorney Donald Schmid.
Ø Mario Carrillo, 69, of South Bend, Indiana, was
sentenced by District Judge Robert Miller, Jr. to 24 months imprisonment and 3
years of supervised release after pleading guilty to the felony offense of
distribution of cocaine. According to
the plea agreement filed in this case, Carrillo admitted that he distributed about 3 ounces of powder cocaine to an
individual he later learned was working for the police. He received
approximately $2,550 in cash for the transaction. This case was the result of an investigation by the Drug Enforcement
Administration, the South Bend Police Department MSOS and the Elkhart County
Prosecutor’s Office Interdiction and Covert Enforcement Unit. This case was prosecuted by Assistant United
States Attorney William Grimmer.
Ø Nolberto Robledo, 35, of San Jose,
California, a defendant in the case US v
Beltran et al., was sentenced by District Judge Robert Miller, Jr. to 70
months imprisonment and 3 years of supervised release after pleading guilty to
the felony offense of possession with the intent to distribute and distribute
cocaine. According to the plea agreement
in this case, Robledo admitted that he was hired by a person in California to transport a vehicle
and some illegal drugs to Elkhart, Indiana. He drove the vehicle to Indiana and
met with a person who followed him to a location where he drove the vehicle
inside a garage. Once inside, the drugs were removed and cash put into the car
to go back to California. He was stopped
by the police who took the car and found the cash. This case was the result of an investigation by the
Drug Enforcement Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, the Elkhart ICE
Unit and the MSOS. This case was
prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney William Grimmer.
Ø Ryan Webb, 32, and Johnny Stine, 40, of Fort Wayne, Indiana,
were each sentenced by District Judge Jon DeGuilio to
21 months imprisonment, 2 years of supervised release and restitution of
$585,000.00 after pleading guilty to the felony offense of making false
statement in connection with a mortgage loan and mortgage insurance. According to the sentencing memorandum filed
by the government in this case, Webb and Stine engaged in an extensive mortgage
fraud scheme by purchasing inexpensive homes and,
through the use of advertising, selling these homes for two and three times
their original purchase price to buyers who could not on their own qualify for
the needed mortgage loan. They provided monies to the home buyers/borrowers to
cover loan closing costs and other expenses.
To hide the fact that all of the monies for closing (that were supposed
to come from the buyers/borrowers but in fact came from the seller), Webb and
Stine prepared phony “gift letters” documenting falsely that the monies they
provided had come from family or friends of the buyers/borrowers. They prepared and submitted mortgage loan
applications containing false statements regarding the available assets of the
home buyer/mortgage loan applicant, including the use of phony/fraudulent asset
documentation that falsely stated buyer-borrower assets in bank accounts. This case was the result of an investigation by the
Department of Housing and Urban Development-Office of the Inspector General,
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Indiana State Police. This case was prosecuted by Assistant United
States Attorney Donald Schmid.