Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Final terms in fake will case settled

- CAITLAN BUTLER

EL DORADO — The final two defendants in a yearslong federal case dealing with the creation and execution of a false will for an estate of more than $1 million were sentenced in federal court in El Dorado on Wednesday.

In April 2018, Marion Diane Kinley pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit wire fraud and was sentenced to 18 months in the federal Bureau of Prisons. She faced up to 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

Jordan Alexandra Peterson was sentenced to three years of probation for lying to an FBI agent, an allegation to which she pleaded guilty in January 2018. Donna Herring, who created the false will, was sentenced Tuesday to 41 months in federal prison. Herring pleaded guilty to one count of wire fraud in January of this year.

John Wayne Kinley, the fourth co-defendant, was sentenced Tuesday to 12 months plus one day in federal prison. The additional day makes him eligible for “good conduct time,” meaning he could serve less than his 12-month sentence. He pleaded guilty to wire fraud in January.

In April 2012, Matthew Seth Jacobs, a survivor of the Deepwater Horizon oil rig explosion in the Gulf of Mexico in 2010, began receiving payments from a multimilli­on-dollar settlement as a result of injuries he suffered in the explosion.

He met Herring the following month, and her family quickly became involved in his life. He bought real estate through Herring, worked with the business of Herring’s husband, and — at Herring’s urging — began dating Peterson, Herring’s then-highschool-aged daughter.

On Jan. 19, 2015, Jacobs was killed in an automobile accident, leaving his then-minor son, Jordan Jacobs, as his only heir. However, no will was found.

Five days after Matthew Jacobs’ death, Herring searched the internet for informatio­n related to Arkansas probate law and created a fake will signed the following morning by John and Diane Kinley. The Kinleys’ debit card was used to pay for a subscripti­on to formswift.com, the legal-document-preparatio­n site through which the fake will was created.

Herring claimed to have found a sealed envelope containing a copy of Matthew Jacobs’ will at her office in Camden. The “original” was in the gun safe, which was previously searched by Lance Reed and Jordan Jacobs, in Matthew Jacobs’ home.

The fake will named Jordan Jacobs and Peterson as beneficiar­ies, with Jordan Jacobs receiving $50,000 to go toward college or trade school, and the remainder of the estate going to Peterson. The estate has been valued at between $1.3 million and $1.7 million.

In November 2016, Herring

was indicted by a grand jury on counts of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. Subsequent supersedin­g indictment­s named the other defendants, all of whom eventually pleaded guilty to crimes in exchange for having other charges against them dismissed.

There was extensive discussion in court Tuesday about whether Diane Kinley was a minor or a more-substantia­l participan­t in the crimes. After several witness testimonie­s and arguments from the prosecutio­n and defense, U.S. District Judge Susan O. Hickey determined Diane Kinley’s participat­ion in the crime was minor, resulting in less criminal exposure for her.

Before sentencing, Diane Kinley’s attorney, Bruce Eddy, requested his client serve less time than Hickey’s sentencing guidelines of 21 to 28 months in prison. He also asked his client to be sentenced to probation. “She has been bullied her entire life … and Donna Herring coming over and telling Ms. Kinley and John Kinley that these things needed to be signed … John Kinley tells us that Ms. Kinley knows what happens when you tell Donna no,” Eddy said, referring to John Kinley’s earlier testimony he and his wife had a difficult time telling Herring no because of Diane Kinley’s previous experience­s with her.

“Bullying is a true thing,” Eddy went on.

Assistant U.S. Attorney

Ben Wulf disagreed with Eddy’s assessment, noting Diane Kinley never told the truth about having knowingly signed a fake will until after she’d been caught and charged.

“The lies remained even through the FBI investigat­ion,” Wulf said. “They maintained their silence, all to the detriment of Mr. Jacobs; all to the detriment of the estate; all to the detriment of the court system.”

Peterson pleaded guilty in January 2018 to lying to the FBI after she falsely said she didn’t know the location of Matthew Jacobs’ cellphone. She was discovered to have taken the cellphone later.

Peterson’s attorney, Allen Roberts, urged Hickey to sentence her to probation. She faced up to five years in prison, and the sentencing guidelines called for zero to six months of incarcerat­ion.

Peterson didn’t speak on her own behalf, and the prosecutio­n didn’t offer any final comments about her case. She was sentenced to three years of probation, with the first six months to be served in home detention with electronic monitoring.

“I don’t take your conduct lightly,” Hickey said.

The case is to close out today after a restitutio­n hearing held with Herring and the Kinleys. Peterson’s charge doesn’t call for restitutio­n. The restitutio­n hearing is scheduled to start at 9:30 a.m. in the federal building in El Dorado.

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