Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Judge rebukes agent, but says Woods case to go on

- DOUG THOMPSON

FAYETTEVIL­LE — U.S. District Judge Timothy Brooks on Friday denied defense motions to dismiss the corruption case involving former state Sen. Jon Woods, R-Springdale, revealing in his court order that the chief FBI investigat­or in the case is under investigat­ion.

Special agent Robert Cessario had the hard drive of the computer used in investigat­ing the Woods case erased after he was ordered to turn it over for investigat­ion.

“Agent’s Cessario’s actions are currently being investigat­ed by the FBI’s Office of the Inspector General,” Brooks noted in Friday’s ruling. “And depending on the results of that investigat­ion, he may face criminal charges.

“But those are not the crimes that have been charged in this case. The grand jury has issued an indictment against these defendants. The public has an interest in seeing that indictment prosecuted, just as the defendants have an interest in holding the government to its burden of proof at trial.”

Earlier in the ruling, Brooks said, “There may be readers of this opinion who feel that this court, by declining to dismiss the indictment, is somehow allowing Agent Cessario — and by extension, the government — to ‘get away with’ bad conduct. The

court would emphasize here that it does not condone Agent Cessario’s actions; it finds them reprehensi­ble. But the public does not forfeit its interest in seeing crime prosecuted simply because one government agent happened to engage in bad conduct along the way.”

Brooks also refused a defense motion that he step aside from the case, confirming that a closed court hearing Jan. 9 was about whether his former employment at the law firm of attorney W.H. Taylor of Fayettevil­le, who has represente­d Woods and Cessario in the past, was raised as an issue by the defense.

Woods; Oren Paris III, president of Ecclesia College in Springdale; and consultant Randell G. Shelton Jr., formerly of Alma, are accused in a federal indictment of participat­ing in a kickbacks scheme involving state grants. The U.S. Justice Department alleges that Paris paid Woods and then-state Rep. Micah Neal, R-Springdale, kickbacks in return for $550,000 in grants from them to his college from 2013 through 2014.

Neal pleaded guilty to a conspiracy count Jan. 4, 2017, for his role in the case. He hasn’t been sentenced.

Neal made secret audio recordings from March 2016 to October 2016, hoping to find more evidence and mitigate the sentence that he expects to receive, according to his testimony in an earlier hearing.

Defense attorneys for

Woods and the two co-defendants asked Brooks to dismiss the case last year, arguing that they never received a complete copy of Neal’s recordings. They received 39 files originally and discovered gaps in the dates between recordings. They also found text messages between Neal, his attorney and Cessario referring to recordings not among the ones the defense team received.

Investigat­ors found 79 recordings on a computer at the office of Neal’s attorney, Shane Wilkerson of Bentonvill­e, that were given to the defense.

The discovery of the gap resulted in the U.S. attorney’s office ordering Cessario to turn in the laptop for inspection. That inspection found that Cessario had the hard drive erased. Cessario’s role as lead investigat­or taints the whole case, defense attorneys argued.

Woods faces 15 counts of fraud, all relating to either wire or mail transfers of money. Paris and Shelton are named in 14 of the fraud charges. Each is charged with one count of conspiracy to commit fraud. Woods is also charged with one count of money laundering in the purchase of a cashier’s check. Their trial is set to begin April 9.

The case involves grants from the state General Improvemen­t Fund, which is controlled by legislator­s.

The case involves grants from the state General Improvemen­t Fund, which is controlled by legislator­s.

The indictment doesn’t give a total figure of what Woods is accused of receiving.

All three defendants have entered innocent pleas.

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