Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

State senator says Woods sought bribe

Hendren rejected request tied to ’12 race, files show

- DOUG THOMPSON

Former Sen. Jon Woods sought a bribe of $10,000 or more to stay out of the way of Jim Hendren’s 2012 state Senate bid in the event that redistrict­ing placed the two men in the same district, according to court documents released Friday and a telephone interview with Hendren on Monday.

Hendren’s name was redacted in the court documents, but the senator confirmed Monday that he was the one who described the bribe request to federal investigat­ors. Hendren rejected Woods’ request, telling him that “he did not do business that way” and leaving the meeting, according to court documents.

“This is a serious allegation which was purportedl­y made by Mr. Hendren six years ago to a number of people with connection­s to law enforcemen­t, both state and federal,” said Patrick Benca of Little Rock, Woods’ attorney. “Nothing was done when the purported allegation was made nor since. Mr. Woods denies the allegation. Mr. Woods is innocent and looks forward to his appeal before the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals.”

Woods faces sentencing in federal court Wednesday on 15 corruption counts involving kickbacks in return for state grants.

Hendren went home after the 2011 meeting, discussed the request with his wife and then called a Benton County deputy prosecutor, he

said Monday. The deputy discussed the matter with an FBI agent who told Hendren that a statement would not be enough to prosecute Woods. Hendren would need to draw Woods into another conversati­on about the offer while wearing a wire, according to the senator’s account Monday.

“They didn’t ask me to wear a wire,” said Hendren, a Republican from Sulphur Springs. “They asked me if I was willing to. I decided not to wear a wire and push it, but to run my race.”

The district lines announced that year — 2011 — did not put the two candidates in the same Senate district. Woods, a Springdale Republican, defeated incumbent state Sen. Bill Pritchard, R-Elkins, in the 2012 GOP primary and won the Senate seat in November.

State legislativ­e districts are redrawn every 10 years after each U.S. census. A Board of Apportionm­ent consisting of the governor, the state attorney general and the secretary of state draw the lines. The current boundaries were announced on July 29, 2011.

Hendren told federal investigat­ors in an Aug. 29, 2017, statement that he was willing to testify on the meeting at Woods’ corruption trial, which was held earlier this year. He was never called as a witness.

“He called the money he

requested ‘moving expenses,’” Hendren said of Woods’ comments at the 2011 meeting, which was held at “some restaurant in Rogers where we could get coffee.” No other witnesses were present, Hendren said. He said the request was for either $10,000 or $12,000, but he was not certain of the figure.

“The thing that stuck this indelibly in my mind was when he said, ‘this is the way it’s done,’ that this sort of thing happens in politics all the time. That is the culture we have to change,” he said.

Hendren is incoming president pro tempore of the state Senate. The Senate formed a select committee on ethics earlier this year.

Woods’ corruption case, which also involves former state Rep. Micah Neal of Springdale, was the first in a series of indictment­s involving abuse of grants from the state’s General Improvemen­t Fund. Five former lawmakers stand convicted in the ongoing federal and state investigat­ions and another — the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee — was charged by federal authoritie­s on Friday with diverting campaign funds to his personal use. Sen. Jeremy Hutchinson resigned from the Senate after the indictment was handed up.

Hutchinson and Hendren are both nephews of Gov. Asa Hutchinson. Gov. Hutchinson played no role in the 2011 drawing of Senate boundaries, as he was sworn in to his first term in January

2015.

Much of the case against Woods was sealed during the ongoing investigat­ion into related cases. U.S. District Judge Timothy Brooks released 532 pages of documents Friday, saying much of the informatio­n had come to light either at Woods’ trial or subsequent­ly.

Among the details revealed in Friday’s release, the documents disclose that Woods, who cooperated with investigat­ors briefly in late 2015 and early 2016, wore a wire to record a conversati­on he held when he met with the governor’s then-chief of staff, Michael Lamoureux, on Nov. 16, 2015. The documents also disclose that federal investigat­ors took photograph­s of that meeting — and that the photograph­s were later discovered to be missing. There is no mention in the documents of what was said at that meeting and whether the pictures were ever recovered.

The informatio­n was found to be missing after FBI Special Agent Robert Cessario wiped the hard drive of a laptop used in the investigat­ion.

Also, the court documents released Friday disclose federal investigat­ors’ claim that state General Improvemen­t Fund grant money was used to buy medical equipment for Woods’ father. The elder Woods is bedridden, according to testimony at Woods’ trial.

Arkansas Health and Economic Research Inc.

was incorporat­ed on Sept. 10, 2013, according to court documents, by a friend of one of Woods’ accomplice­s in the kickback scheme. That accomplice, Randell Shelton Jr. of Kemp, Texas, also faces sentencing this week on 12 counts.

Health and Economic Research received a $20,000 state General Improvemen­t Fund grant on Sept. 26, 2013, 16 days after it was created. The grant had been applied for the same day the Benton-based company had been incorporat­ed, court documents say.

A witness whose name was redacted from court records stood ready to testify that the grant money to Health and Economic Research was used “to purchase equipment used to provide treatment for Woods’s father. It is also anticipate­d that [redacted] will testify that Shelton used GIF grant money received by AHER for personal expenses and expenses relating to Shelton’s for-profit business.”

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