FORMER CONGRESSMAN RICHARD G. RENZI CONVICTED OF
EXTORTION AND BRIBERY IN ILLEGAL FEDERAL LAND SWAP
Photo by Jim Keyworth
Rick Renzi appears on a local radio station talk show.
WASHINGTON
– A former Republican U.S. Congressman and a real-estate investor were convicted
today by a federal jury in Tucson, Ariz., of conspiring together to
extort and
bribe individuals seeking a federal land exchange, announced Acting
Assistant Attorney General Mythili Raman of the Justice Department’s
Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney John Leonardo of the District of
Arizona.
Richard
G. Renzi, 55, of Burke, Va., was found guilty of 17 felony offenses
including conspiracy, honest services wire fraud, extortion under color
of official
right, racketeering, money laundering and making false statements to
insurance regulators.
James
W. Sandlin, 62, of Sherman, Texas, was found guilty of 13 felony
offenses including conspiracy, honest services wire fraud, extortion
under color of official
right and money laundering.
Sentencing is set before U. S. District Judge David C. Bury on August 19, 2013.
“Former
Congressman Renzi’s streak of criminal activity was a betrayal of the
public trust and abuse of the political process,” said Acting Assistant
Attorney
General Raman. “After years of misconduct as a businessman, political
candidate and member of Congress, Mr. Renzi now faces the consequences
for breaking the laws that he took an oath to support and defend.”
U.S.
Attorney John Leonardo stated, “Our democracy is undermined whenever
our elected officials misuse the power entrusted to them by the voters
to serve their own private interests
rather than in the service of the public interest. The jury’s verdict
reinforces the fundamental principle that our society is governed by the
rule of law, and that no citizen, including the most influential and
powerful among us, is above the law.”
FBI
Special Agent in Charge Douglas G. Price stated, “Today’s conviction is
a culmination of the investigative efforts of the FBI and IRS-Criminal
Investigation
over a period of several years. Public corruption is one of the top
criminal priorities of the FBI, and it is imperative that elected public
officials be held accountable to uphold the public’s trust. The FBI
remains committed to this criminal priority in
combating public corruption at all levels.”
According to evidence at trial, Renzi, then a member of Congress from Arizona’s 1st
Congressional District,
promised in 2005 to use his legislative influence to profit from a
federal land exchange that involved property owned by Sandlin, a
real-estate investor.
At the time, Sandlin owed Renzi $700,000 in future payments from their
business dealings, and Renzi threatened a proponent of the land exchange
that he would not support it unless
they purchased Sandlin’s property in Cochise County, Ariz. When that
individual refused, Renzi promised a second proponent of a land exchange that
he would support the exchange if they purchased Sandlin’s property.
According to
an agreement reached in May 2005, Sandlin was paid $1 million in earnest
money, out of which he paid $200,000 to Renzi. Just before Sandlin
received the $1.6 million balance owed on the exchange, he paid an
additional $533,000 to Renzi.
Evidence
at trial further showed that from 2001 to 2003, Renzi engaged in
insurance fraud by diverting his clients’ insurance premiums to fund his
first campaign
for Congress, and he provided false statements to various state
regulators who were investigating his activities.
Renzi
was indicted in February 2008, and in October 2008, Renzi moved to
dismiss the indictment under his rights as a member of Congress under
the Speech or Debate
Clause. The court denied his motion in February 2010, and Renzi pursued
an interlocutory appeal. After Renzi’s appeal was unsuccessful, trial
was set for May 2013.
Honest
services wire fraud, extortion under color of official right,
concealment money laundering and racketeering each carry maximum
penalties of 20 years in prison. Conspiracy
carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison, and making false
statements to insurance regulators and transactional money laundering
each carry maximum penalties of 10 years in prison.
This case was investigated by the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service –
Criminal Investigation. The prosecution was handled by Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Gary Restaino and James
Knapp of the District of Arizona and Trial Attorneys David Harbach and
Sean Mulryne of the Department of Justice’s Public Integrity Section.
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