Texarkana Gazette

Ex-lobbyist pleads guilty to bribery

Scheme involves two former state senators and an unnamed legislator, court documents say

-

SPRINGFIEL­D, Mo.—A former lobbyist has pleaded guilty to bribing two former Arkansas state senators and an as-yet unnamed “Senator A” who court documents say received $500,000 in bribes, attorney’s fees and tickets to the 2013 World Series from a Missouriba­sed nonprofit.

Milton R. “Rusty” Cranford of Bentonvill­e pleaded guilty Thursday to one count of federal program bribery for his role in bribing former state Sens. Jon Woods and Henry “Hank” Wilkins IV as Arkansas director of Preferred Family Healthcare of Springfiel­d, Mo. The crime carries a maximum sentence of 10 years in prison. He waived indictment by a grand jury to plead guilty to this new charge in a deal in which other counts were dropped.

“Senator A” filed Senate Bill 62 of 2015 and Senate Bill 655 of the same year, court documents show. The sponsor of those bills, legislativ­e records show, is Sen. Jeremy Hutchinson of Little Rock. Hutchinson, reached by telephone Thursday morning, said he had no immediate comment but would have a response later.

In 2013, another unnamed company that rated behavioral health service providers such as Preferred Family was told Wilkins would use his position on the Joint Budget Committee to make sure its contract was not renewed unless it accommodat­ed requests from Cranford, the lobbyist’s plea agreement says.

In all, the three lawmakers

steered about $1 million in state General Improvemen­t Fund money to Cranford’s clients and another $400,000 to a company he set up, the plea document says.

Cranford was originally charged with nine counts alleging he helped unnamed executives embezzle almost $1 million from Preferred Family Healthcare, according to his Feb. 20 federal indictment. The nonprofit behavioral health provider operates in five states, including 47 locations in Arkansas.

Cranford had paid bribes to Arkansas legislator­s since at least 2010, court documents show.

The embezzled money was used for personal benefit and to pay for illegal lobbying, the indictment says. Federal agents arrested Cranford on Feb. 21 in Rogers. He has remained in custody since, denied bail in part because prosecutor­s allege he tried to have a co-conspirato­r killed. Cranford was originally indicted on one count of conspiracy and eight counts of accepting bribes.

Cranford is also a named as a co-conspirato­r of Woods and former state Rep. Micah Neal, both of Springdale. Cranford paid kickbacks to the two in return for their support of $400,000 in state grants. Those grants went to a company Cranford set up only after the grants were approved.

Neal pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy on Jan. 4, 2017, in that and other kickback schemes. Woods was convicted May 3 in the same schemes. Cranford was not charged in Arkansas.

Wilkins of Pine Bluff took about $80,000 in bribes from 2010 to 2014, according to his April 30 guilty plea. Wilkins’ plea documents cited two parties that paid bribes but did not name them. Federal authoritie­s in Missouri confirmed that one was Cranford in a March 16 hearing in which Cranford was denied bail. The other was an unnamed nonprofit based in Pine Bluff that paid Wilkins $20,000.

Eddie Wayne Cooper of Melbourne, a former state representa­tive who went to work for Cranford’s lobbying firm after leaving office in 2011, pleaded guilty Feb. 12 in Missouri to one count of conspiracy. Cooper pleaded guilty to the same embezzleme­nt and illegal lobbying scheme that Cranford was indicted for in Missouri. He also pleaded guilty to further embezzleme­nt involving the same individual­s who took another $3 million from Preferred Family, according to his plea documents. At one time, Cooper sat on the nonprofit’s board.

 ??  ?? CRANFORD
CRANFORD

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States