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Sentences Come for Shoplifting Ring, Machine Gun Possession, and 2002 Cooper-Young Shooting

The new acting U.S. attorney here announced new sentences recently for the crimes of running an organized retail theft ring, shooting a machine gun at the cops (on a warning about putting down a cell phone while driving), and a resentencing for the 2002 shooting of a pizza delivery person in Cooper-Young.

Shoplifting conspiracy

Four Memphians were sentenced in the last two months for an organized retail theft conspiracy worth millions. 

Acting U.S. Attorney Reagan Fondren’s office said the scheme stretched three years from April 2018 to May 2020. In it, three people — Latasha Brooks, 42; Coyoti Carter, 47; and Tarnisha Woods, 49 — would go to stores and shoplift “large quantities of health and beauty products including memory supplements, hair regrowth treatments, weight loss aids, and allergy medicines.” 

Afterward, Keith Guy, 38, would pay Brooks for the stolen goods. Brooks would then pay Carter and Woods for their work. Guy then sold the stolen goods to resellers on the internet. He used the U.S. Postal Service to ship hundreds of parcels to locations across the country. 

Investigation officials estimated the total retail value of the products stolen in the scheme at over $4 million. 

The four were indicted by a grand jury in December. They all pleaded guilty. Earlier this month, Guy was sentenced to 34 months in prison. In August, Brooks was sentenced to 34 months, Carter was sentenced to one year and one day, and Woods was sentenced to 15 months in prison.     

Cell phone warning turns to machine gun sentence 

On February 1, 2022, a Shelby County Sheriff’s deputy saw Jaquan Bridges, 22, driving slowly near I-240 and Walnut Grove while looking at his cell phone. The deputy activated emergency equipment to alert Bridges (either flashed the car’s lights, wooped the siren, or both) to put the phone down. 

“Bridges rolled down his passenger-side window and fired gunshots at the deputy’s vehicle, striking it several times,” reads a statement from the U.S. attorney’s office. “Bridges then fled, leading deputies on a high-speed pursuit for 10 miles, before Bridges hit at least three other vehicles and crashed into a concrete barrier.  

“When Bridges was taken into custody, deputies recovered a Glock .40 caliber pistol with an attached machine gun conversion device (known as a ‘switch’) and extended magazine.” 

Two years later, Bridges pleaded guilty to the charges. Earlier this month, he was sentenced to nine years for possessing a machine gun. 

Resentencing in 2002 Cooper-Young shooting

The original sentence for Louie Holloway, 43, of Memphis, was vacated in 2022 after changes in gun laws in Tennessee. (It’s unclear which law change brought the decision to vacate: constitutional carry or allowing short-barreled rifles and shotguns).  

Holloway was serving life in prison for the 2002 murder and attempted robbery of John Stambaugh, a University of Memphis student who was delivering pizza in Cooper-Young. 

(Read Bruce VanWyngarden’s great column on the ordeal from the time here.)

After his sentence was vacated, however, the district court immediately scheduled a resentencing hearing. In that one, Holloway was sentenced to 50 years in federal prison. There is no parole in the federal system. 

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Politics Politics Feature

Cooper Sentencing Postponed Again, Until May 1st

Sentencing for Joe Cooper, who pleaded guilty almost a year ago to federal charges of money laundering, has been rescheduled for May 1st. This follows a previous postponement of Cooper’s sentencing, which had been scheduled for last summer.

Former county squire Cooper is expected to be a key government witness in pending bribery and extortion cases involving outgoing city councilman Edmund Ford Sr., who, along with former councilman Rickey Peete, was targeted in a sting in which Cooper, who was cooperating with the FBI and the U.S. Attorney’s office, wore a wire. (Peete pleaded guilty and received a sentence of four years and three months.)

Ford and Peete were indicted in November. Cooper had been arrested earlier in the year on a tip from drug dealer Korreco Green, who was in federal custody at the time. Green, who had been purchasing a car from Cooper at Bud David Cadillac, decided to work with the FBI and tipped agents to the elaborate and irregular means by which Cooper, who had a previous felony conviction, had arranged financing for Green’s automobile purchase.

Ironically, Green’s arrest had come after he missed several payments and Cooper had sworn out a warrant for his arrest as a car thief.

–Jackson Baker

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Judge Gives John Ford’s Attorney Time to Read Transcripts

John Ford will probably not be going to prison before December.

On Monday, U.S. District Judge Daniel Breen set a date of November 19th for Ford’s attorney, Robert C. Brooks, to file a motion to allow Ford to remain free on bond. Ford was convicted of bribery in the Tennessee Waltz investigation earlier this year and sentenced to five and a half years in prison.

Brooks, an appeals specialist, said he needs six weeks to read the 3000-page trial transcript and decide whether to ask for an appeal bond. Brooks took over Ford’s Memphis case from trial attorney Michael Scholl.

Should Brooks make that motion, Breen said a hearing on it would be held in Memphis on November 28th. Breen said Ford’s report date would be moved back to some time in December.

Ford has a November 6th trial date in Nashville on unrelated federal charges stemming from his consulting work for Tenn-Care contractors. His Nashville attorney, Isaiah Gant, was in Breen’s courtroom Monday and told the judge it is likely that the trial will begin on that date although a delay is possible. Gant said the trial is expected to last four or five weeks.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Tim DiScenza said Ford could begin serving his prison sentence in October as originally scheduled and still make his November 6th trial date. DiScenza said many defendants have other cases pending. He said Ford could start doing his time at a facility in Nashville or federal marshals could bring him to Nashville from Texas when the trial starts.

“Mr. Ford is no different than any other defendant who goes to trial,” said DiScenza.

Brooks said ‘there appears to be this rush to get Mr. Ford locked up.” But he said that putting Ford in prison at this time would “deny him due process and assistance of counsel.”

Breen said that if Ford’s Nashville case begins November 6th then he will revisit the issues raised in Memphis by Brooks.

Ford left the courtroom without speaking to reporters.

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Attorney Gets Five Years in Child Porno Case

Memphis attorney Drayton Beecher Smith II was sentenced to five years in prison Friday for possession and receipt of child pornography by U.S. District Judge Bernice Donald.

Smith, 57, pled guilty in June to receiving child pornography on a computer. The case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative led by federal and state prosecutors.

Smith’s sentence may raise some eyebrows. It is longer than Mary Winkler’s sentence for fatally shooting her husband, longer than Willie Madison’s sentence for defrauding a day-care center (Donald also handed down that sentence), and nearly as long as John Ford’s sentence in Tennessee Waltz.

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Wrapping Up Tennessee Waltz

John Ford boasted that he was “the guy who makes the deals,” but court exhibits made public after his sentencing indicate that his friends and fellow deal-makers did not exactly swarm to his defense in his hour of need.

U.S. district judge Daniel Breen allowed letters of support for Ford to be placed in the public record in the case. In August, Breen sentenced Ford to 66 months in prison for his bribery conviction — the longest sentence so far in the Tennessee Waltz case.

Twelve people wrote letters to Breen on Ford’s behalf requesting leniency in the sentencing. Seven of the writers were supporters and family members who also spoke at the sentencing hearing — Frank Thomas, Howard Richardson, Mabra Holeyfield, Pamela Wherry, Vickie Miller Brown, Joyce Miller Ford, and Autumn Ford Burnette.

Five others wrote letters but did not speak. They included attorney Edward Dixon of Shreveport, Louisiana; William H. Graves, presiding bishop of Christian Methodist Episcopal Church; Jerry D. Taylor, pastor of Greater Love Baptist Church; and Billene Durham. One more letter was filed under protective seal, and its author is unknown.

While there is obviously a limit on the number of people who can speak at a sentencing hearing without overtaxing the judge’s patience, there is no limit on letter-writing. Ford spent more than 30 years in politics in Memphis and Nashville. According to his attorney Michael Scholl, his supporters, and his own taped conversations, he was exceptionally powerful and effective and worked at the center of numerous big deals. But only one current elected official — state representative Ulysses Jones — spoke or wrote to Breen on Ford’s behalf. No state or city officials spoke or wrote.

In other Tennessee Waltz news, government witness Barry Myers is scheduled to be sentenced October 4th. Kathryn Bowers has an October 24th sentencing date, and Ward Crutchfield is scheduled to be sentenced on November 28th. Ford has a court hearing in Nashville on September 18th and a November 6th trial date on federal charges stemming from his consulting work for TennCare providers.

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Politics Politics Feature

The Appeal of John Ford

The John Ford saga isn’t over, but some friends of the former senator would probably breathe easier if it were.

Ford plans to appeal his conviction on a federal bribery charge in the Tennessee Waltz investigation. This week he was sentenced to 66 months in prison. But the FBI’s undercover sting operation has withstood previous challenges and jury verdicts are seldom overturned, so Ford’s appeal looks like a Hail Mary pass.

But the appeal could give Ford some leverage with federal prosecutors in Nashville, where he faces a November 6th trial date on charges related to his consulting work for Tenn-Care contractors between 2001-2005.

“If I were his defense attorney, I would be going to the U.S. attorney up there and saying, ‘you all have already convicted my client and he got 66 months, so what if we dropped our appeal?'” said Hickman Ewing, former United States attorney in Memphis. “Maybe they would say that if he would plead guilty to one count they would make it concurrent to what he already got. The bottom line is how strong they think their case is. I don’t know that they have got any videotapes. If they had not had videotapes here, it would have been a lot harder case.”

The Nashville case is complicated by several other factors. Different federal prosecutors are in charge of the Memphis and Nashville offices. Ford’s Nashville indictment came 18 months after he was indicted in Tennessee Waltz and delayed the start of his Memphis trial a few months.

On top of that, there has been a change in command in Nashville this year. The United States attorney in Nashville in 2006 was Craig Morford, who is now the number-two man in the Attorney General’s office in Washington. When the indictment was announced, Morford said it revealed “an appalling willingness to violate (his) duty by using his public position for personal gain.”

Whether his successors share that hunger to prosecute is not known. In a brief meeting in Nashville this week with this reporter, Assistant U.S. Attorney Eli Richardson, who is one of the prosecutors in the Nashville case along with Paul O’Brien, would only say that there is a hearing in September to discuss a motion to suppress certain evidence. He said he could not discuss the case other than to confirm the November 6th trial date — the latest in a series postponements and reschedulings since Ford was indicted in Nashville on December 13th, 2006.

In Tennessee Waltz, Ford’s “business partners” were undercover FBI agents posing as executives of E-Cycle Management. He was paid $55,000. In the Nashville case, Ford’s main business partners were Tenn-Care contractors Doral Dental and Omnicare Health Plan, which was renamed UAHC Health Plan of Tennessee. Those companies, unlike E-Cycle, are very real. And Ford was paid more than $800,000 by them over a period of nearly four years.

According to the indictment, Ford owned a 40-percent interest in Managed Care Services Group (MCSG). The other owners were “Individual A” and “Individual B” in the indictment, but they have since been identified as Osbie Howard, former treasurer for the city of Memphis, and Ronald Dobbins.

Howard, former CEO of UAHC, testified as a character witness at Ford’s sentencing hearing last week. Assistant U.S. attorney Tim DiScenza challenged his testimony about Ford’s income and accused Howard of making a false statement to an FBI agent earlier this year about Ford’s income tax return. Howard took the Fifth Amendment when DiScenza tried to question him further. Ironically, he said his current occupation is ‘consultant, which means I don’t do much.”

According to court documents filed in Nashville, Ford earned $470,414 in 2004 and $470,938 in 2003. The indictment says Ford formed MCSG to get payments from Doral Dental and hid that fact while working as a state senator and head of a Tenn-Care committee. According to the indictment, Ford had another relationship with UAHC to be a “consultant” for $10,000 a month. He allegedly sponsored legislation benefiting UAHC and its predecessor and met with other state officials on their behalf.

A Nashville trial could be embarrassing or worse to other Ford “consulting” clients and business associates. According to case documents, they included the Oseman Insurance Agency of Memphis, the Armstrong Allen law firm, Hospice USA, Unum Life Insurance, Connie Matthews (the mother of two of Ford’s children), and former Shelby County Commission member Bridget Chisholm among others.

In summary, the Nashville case cuts to the heart of John Ford’s everyday business as a consultant. If the case goes to trial, it could go a long way toward clarifying what local and state elected part-time officials who claim that their full-time occupation is “consultant” can and cannot do. If it is dismissed, consulting will continue to be a gray area.

Ford has already received what is quite possibly a political death sentence. He is 65 years old and, assuming he does not begin serving his sentence until 2008, he would be 71 or older by the time he gets out. DiScenza made a point of urging sentencing judge Daniel Breen to give Ford a long sentence so he could not stage a political comeback and commit another crime, as former Memphis City Councilman Rickey Peete did.

Ewing said one option for federal prosecutors is to move to dismiss the case, provided he cooperates regarding other people. But he did not think that federal budget considerations would weigh on that, as a front-page article in Friday’s Wall Street Journal about the U.S. Justice Department suggested. Parodying a famous credit card commercial, he said, “Additional trial, $30,000. Appeal, $15,000. Getting a corrupt public official out of office, priceless.”

Despite his former $470,000 a year income, Ford has pleaded indigence and is being represented by federal public defenders now. He was not fined or ordered to make restitution in the Tennessee Waltz case, although DiScenza suggested his state pension should be used to pay for the cost of his incarceration. In the Nashville case Ford is charged with getting more than $800,000, but if prosecutors don’t think he has the money, that could influence their decision about whether to try him again, Ewing said.

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Ford Seeks Mercy; Judge Delays Sentence Until Tuesday

John Ford asked a federal judge for mercy Monday but he’ll have to wait until Tuesday to find out if he gets it.

Speaking for 10 minutes at the end of a nearly five-hour sentencing hearing, Ford told U.S. District Judge Daniel Breen he accepts “total responsibility” for his acts and was “ashamed” at the way he was portrayed on secret tapes during his trial.

Breen ended court shortly before 6:30 p.m. and will reconvene it at 9 a.m. Tuesday. He will give prosecutors and Ford’s attorney one more chance to speak, then he will deliver the sentence.

Thirteen friends and family members of Ford spoke on his behalf Monday. They said he is a good father and was a “go-to” legislator for 31 years.

The most dramatic moment of the day came when Ford himself spoke to Breen in a soft voice. He seemed to struggle to maintain his composure at times, but finished with a plea for mercy for his children rather than himself.

(See memphisflyer.com for full details Tuesday and this week’s print edition of the Flyer.)

–John Branston