Press Release
Former Kearney Man Sentenced to 9 Years for Wire Fraud
For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Nebraska
United States Attorney Susan Lehr announced that Jeffery S. Sikes, age 43, formerly of Kearney, Nebraska, was sentenced on August 27, 2024, in federal court in Lincoln, Nebraska for committing wire fraud. Senior United States District Judge John M. Gerrard sentenced Sikes to 108 months’ imprisonment. After Sikes’ release from prison, he will begin a 3-year term of supervised release. There is no parole in the federal system. Sikes was additionally ordered to pay $819,169.96 in restitution to the victims of his crimes.
Beginning in early 2012, and continuing through on or about July 1, 2014, Sikes devised and enacted multiple fraudulent schemes in the District of Nebraska. The Indictment charged Sikes with enacting several separate schemes with different victims being preyed upon by Sikes for each individual scheme. In each scheme Sikes defrauded others, obtaining money and property by the means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, promises, and omissions and during the course of which different wires or mails would be used in furtherance of the schemes. The charges included a scheme representing to real estate developers that Sikes had located tenants and demanding a finder’s fee—when in fact no tenants existed. In another scheme, Sikes convinced others to invest their retirement into an alleged new research and development company which did not in reality exist. Each scheme typically included complex fraudulent documents which were used to lull the victims into a sense of security.
In the scheme to which Sikes pled guilty, he approached B & J Partnership, d/b/a Speedway Properties (“B & J”), as a “consultant” for Vanguard Nebraska, a limited liability company (“Vanguard”). He contacted B & J about obtaining a lease for commercial space owned by B & J in Lincoln, Nebraska. Sikes represented to B & J that Vanguard intended to establish laboratory space in Lincoln for use in research and development. Sikes proposed that B & J provide $750,000 in financing for the build out of the commercial space owned by B & J. He provided complex falsified documents to convince B & J to enter into the lease and to finance the building including fraudulent balance sheets and IRS tax forms; fraudulent information about purported subcontractors who were allegedly responsible for the construction; and fraudulent bills payable from said subcontractors for work performed or materials related to the construction costs for the property. In reality, Vanguard was never a real company. All documents submitted to B &J and others concerning Vanguard and the subcontractors allegedly working on the project were manufactured and fraudulently created by Sikes and others working with Sikes. During the course of this scheme, Sikes directed the disbursement of funds for fraudulent invoices of $507,231.96 causing a loss to B & J.
In addition to the loss to B & J, the other schemes mentioned within the Indictment resulted in the loss of an additional $311,938 to other victims. In total, Sikes is responsible for defrauding multiple companies, organizations, and individuals for $819,169.96.
Sikes pled guilty to one count of wire fraud on April 28, 2017. On January 5, 2018, Sikes did not appear for his sentencing hearing and a warrant was issued for his arrest. It was later determined that Sikes fled Nebraska to Alabama, where he was living in hiding with others and using the alias “Kenneth Allen.” In February of 2022, Sikes was arrested and charged with conspiracy to maliciously destroy by fire in the District of Alabama—a crime for which he was convicted on May 30, 2023. Pursuant to the documents in that case, while living as a fugitive in Alabama, Sikes led a conspiracy of seven other co-defendants. As part of the conspiracy, Sikes and the others set fires to four different Walmart stores in Alabama and Mississippi. Each of the fires were set during business hours while customers, employees, and vendors were inside the stores. In the lead up to setting these fires, Sikes and his conspirators had meetings and drafted a “Declaration of War and Demands for the People” that made demands and consisted of threats against Walmart if their demands were not met.
Sikes pled guilty to the conspiracy charge in the Alabama case. He was sentenced to 216 months’ (18 years) imprisonment, supervised release for 3 years, and to pay restitution in the amount of $7,295,533.23 to be paid jointly and severally with co-defendants from that case. After Sikes’ sentencing in Alabama, he was returned to the District of Nebraska to face sentencing for his crimes committed as part of this case in the District of Nebraska. The sentence of imprisonment imposed today by Senior District Judge Gerrard was ordered to be consecutive to Sikes’ term of imprisonment imposed in the Alabama case.
Following today’s sentencing United States Attorney Susan T. Lehr stated “The United States Attorney’s Office is dedicated to ensuring justice is served for all crimes committed in the District of Nebraska and to holding defendants accountable regardless of the number of years it takes. Jeffery Sikes’ serious crimes perpetrated against numerous Nebraska citizens and businesses was not forgotten and today’s sentence is a reflection of the dedication and hard work of all those involved with this case both before and after Sikes fled in 2018.”
"Jeffrey S. Sikes' fraudulent schemes had devastating financial consequences for his Nebraska victims," said FBI Omaha Special Agent in Charge Eugene Kowel. "His attempt to avoid facing the consequences of his crimes was futile. No matter how long it takes, the FBI is dedicated to working with our federal, state, and local law enforcement partners to bring criminals to justice."
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
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Updated September 10, 2024
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