Chattanooga Times Free Press

Brothers in textile mill scheme get 4-plus years in prison

- BY MARY FORTUNE

Two brothers at the center of a failed textile mill fraud were sentenced Friday to 50 months in federal prison, 18 months after pleading guilty to charges of wire fraud and money laundering in the sweeping financial scheme. “The nature and circumstan­ces of the actions these defendants have taken are very disturbing,” said Travis McDonough, chief U.S. District Judge for the Eastern District of Tennessee. “This was no accident. It was an intentiona­l, deliberate, methodical theft from taxpayers and the community.”

Twin brothers Karim and Rahim Sadruddin, 34, executed a complex series of financial frauds worth more than $30 million against federal, state and regional agencies. The financial crimes that began in the spring of 2017 were connected to a range of plans, from the unfulfille­d promise of the new textile plant expected to bring 1,000 jobs to Pikeville, Tennessee, to substandar­d tarps delivered to hurricane victims in Puerto Rico through a Federal Emergency Management Agency contract.

During the sentencing hearing in Chattanoog­a, attorneys for the brothers asked that the judge consider home confinemen­t for the men, who live with their families in the Atlanta area. The Sadruddins have made a good-faith effort to make restitutio­n, and would be able to continue to do that if they were sentenced to home confinemen­t, said Gene Shiles, who represente­d Karim Sadruddin.

“They have promised to continue to do this until the state is made whole,” Shiles said, adding that the men anticipate­d being able to pay $5,000 a month raised through “legitimate business practices.” The brothers have raised about $1 million in restitutio­n in the past 18 months through the sale of personal assets, as well as the tarps at the center of the federal fraud charges.

Karim Sadruddin told the judge during the hearing that he wants the opportunit­y to raise his young son and newborn baby to know right from wrong.

“I just want a chance to make it right,” said Sadruddin, whose wife and sister-in-law also attended the hearing. “I plead for a chance to do that.”

Attorney Lee Davis, who represente­d Rahim Sadruddin, pointed to the brothers’ business partner in the textile mill deal, developer Ed Cagle, as the mastermind behind the financial fraud. Textile Corp. of America, a

company formed in 2017 by the Sadruddins, along with Cagle and former Alabama Attorney General Troy King, received a $3 million grant from the state to build the textile mill.

“The idea definitely, clearly, unequivoca­lly was Mr. Cagle’s,” Davis said. “They were the vehicle for Cagle.”

Cagle, who attended the sentencing hearing, said he bears no responsibi­lity for the Sadruddins’ actions.

“Why would they plead guilty if they wasn’t?” Cagle said after the hearing. “I build manufactur­ing plants and they wanted to know could I build them a manufactur­ing plant? I don’t know anything about grants.”

In handing down the sentence, McDonough said the brothers owe more than $7 million to the state of Tennessee, FEMA and TVA collective­ly.

During an impact statement as part of the sentencing hearing, Bledsoe County Mayor Gregg Ridley said the people who had hoped the promised mill would deliver much-needed jobs to the region were also victims. The brothers had promised to bring jobs to a shuttered, 186,000-squarefoot manufactur­ing plant in Pikeville. In July 2019, the company that financed the plant sale to Textile Corp. of America, Whoriskey Inc., reclaimed the property when no bidder was willing to pay more than the $1.4 million debt owed by TCA on the plant.

“That building has been stolen from the community,” Ridley said. “The real victim here is Bledsoe County citizens.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Steve Neff, who led the multi-agency investigat­ion of the Sadruddins, said there was no indication the brothers ever intended to deliver the promised jobs, and that five to 10 sewing machines in the manufactur­ing facility were the only evidence of their work there.

“The scheme was basically soaked with fraud throughout,” Neff said. “The defendants benefited personally from this fraud.”

He also objected to the idea that the Sadruddins should be considered for leniency because they had made an effort at restitutio­n.

“They shouldn’t get extra credit for doing what they’re already supposed to do,” Neff said.

The brothers are expected to report for incarcerat­ion Aug. 16. Between now and then, the state will pursue additional charges, said Mike Taylor, district attorney for Tennessee’s 12th Judicial District.

“We will hopefully get the state case resolved in that time,” he said.

 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER ?? Rahim and Karim Sadruddin talk with Bledsoe County officials in December 2018 about their plans for Textile Corp. of America.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER Rahim and Karim Sadruddin talk with Bledsoe County officials in December 2018 about their plans for Textile Corp. of America.
 ?? STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER ?? Dunlap, Tenn., attorney Thomas Austin leads the foreclosur­e sale of the shuttered Textile Corp. of America plant in Pikeville at the entrance of the Bledsoe County Courthouse in July 2019. Standing in the foreground on the left are attorney Lance Pope and his client, Karim Sadruddin, the CEO of Textile Corp. of America.
STAFF PHOTO BY DAVE FLESSNER Dunlap, Tenn., attorney Thomas Austin leads the foreclosur­e sale of the shuttered Textile Corp. of America plant in Pikeville at the entrance of the Bledsoe County Courthouse in July 2019. Standing in the foreground on the left are attorney Lance Pope and his client, Karim Sadruddin, the CEO of Textile Corp. of America.

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