The Commercial Appeal

Judge cuts fine to $20,000 for man convicted in Miss. bribery case

- JEFF AMY

A businessma­n who bribed Mississipp­i’s former prisons chief will only have to pay a $20,000 fine, not the $150,000 originally imposed, after he testified Wednesday that his debts outweigh his assets.

U.S. District Judge Henry T. Wingate lowered the amount Wednesday after hearing evidence that Cecil McCrory of Brandon doesn’t have enough money to pay the higher amount.

“His financial situation indeed has changed,” Wingate said.

Instead of his original ruling calling for McCrory to pay the whole amount within six months, Wingate ruled that McCrory should start making fine payments while he is in prison, and be required to pay at least $150 a month once he is released.

Federal prosecutor­s did not oppose the change.

The former state lawmaker was sentenced in February to serve 8½ years in prison, forfeit $1.7 million in assets and pay the fine. McCrory pleaded guilty to money laundering conspiracy, admitting he’d bribed former Correction­s Commission­er Christophe­r Epps and helped Epps launder dirty money.

McCrory came to sentencing with a $1.1 million forfeiture check, but lawyer Carlos Tanner said that check bounced, and McCrory had to later come back with a check for $1.07 million.

The lawyer said the presentenc­ing report prepared for Wingate did not reflect that McCrory’s assets would be greatly diminished after the forfeiture.

McCrory testified Wednesday that his has $40,000 in assets, but owes $72,500 on a bank loan, meaning his debts outweigh his assets by $32,500. That’s in part because ownership of McCrory’s house was transferre­d in 2012 to a legal trust that McCrory can’t benefit from.

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