Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

$3M cattle fraud devastates pair of Ariz. families

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TUCSON, Ariz. — About $3 million worth of cattle was stolen from an Arizona family by a man they once considered a friend, prosecutor­s said in court documents.

The fraud has pushed both families to the brink of financial ruin, the Arizona Daily Star reported.

Longtime cattleman and rodeo cowboy Clay Parsons discovered last August that $1.3 million was missing from the accounts of the Marana Stockyards and Livestock Market, which his family has run since the early 1990s. It is one of the busiest stockyards in all of Arizona.

The stockyard’s line of credit also was drawn down by nearly $2 million, according to court records.

A trail of fraudulent documents led to Seth Nichols, the stockyard’s 29-year-old office manager, who pleaded guilty to federal bank fraud in February and faces up to five years in prison.

Nichols is the son of Donald Hugh Nichols, a cattle broker who had been friends with Parsons for decades, court records show. Donald was indicted last month as a co-conspirato­r in $1.6 million of fraudulent cattle sales at the stockyard’s auctions.

A federal prosecutor said the stockyard is operating “week to week” as it recovers from the fraud and Parsons has already spent $100,000 on audits and rebuilding the stockyard’s accounting system.

Donald Hugh Nichols, who goes by Hugh, and his wife, Jane Nichols, filed for bankruptcy in federal court Aug. 10.

The scheme began after Parsons hired Seth Nichols in June 2013 to run the stockyard’s day-to-day business.

Seth Nichols agreed to pay restitutio­n to the Parsons, which was capped at $3 million in his plea agreement. But those funds won’t be available until after he is sentenced Sept. 24.

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