Mckinney Courier-gazette > News

Car dealership owner facing federal money laundering charges

Published: Monday, June 15, 2009 10:33 PM CDT
The owner of a Hickory Creek car dealership who lives in McKinney is accused of funneling money through his business to launder cash obtained through drug deals, prostitution and other financial crimes.

By Danny Gallagher, McKinney Courier-Gazette

The U.S. Attorney's Office is seeking federal conspiracy charges against a McKinney man for laundering drug and prostitution money through his car dealership.

A federal grand jury indicted Richard Alan Arledge, 54, of McKinney last week in the U.S. District Court of Eastern Texas on a count of conspiracy to launder monetary instruments through his car dealership, Richard Arledge Suzuki of Hickory Creek and Expressway Financial, according to federal court records.

U.S. Attorney John Bales and Assistant U.S. Attorney Shamoil Shipchandler said in the indictment that Arledge, along with dealer employees 38-year-old Cecil Coleman of McKinney, 46-year-old Steve Ham of Richardson and 33-year-old Rustyn Thomas of Sanger, sold luxury vehicles to fellow defendants with money earned from illegal practices and concealed the identity of the purchasers to erase their money trail back to their original owners.

The purchasers would make large cash payments disguised as "down payments" on the vehicles and Arledge failed to report these payments to the Internal Revenue Service to further conceal their identities, according to the indictment.

The money used to purchase the vehicles was obtained through illegal business practices from drugs to prostitution. The indictment said that 33-year-old Warren "The Governor" Barconia of Carrollton, 39-year-old Jerome "Rome" Helen of Richardson obtained their money from prostitution. 46-year-old Stoney O'Neal Kidd, 33-year-old Charo Deuntray Knight and 32-year-old Clarence "Rat" Williams all of Dallas obtained their money through the sale and distribution of controlled substances. 46-year-old Tyrone McCray of Plano obtained his money through fraudulent financial crimes.

The laundering started in January of 2006. Coleman worked for Arledge as a salesman under his Expressway Financial business and would recruit or recommend purchasers to Arledge, Ham who worked as the dealership's sales manager or Thomas, the dealership's Internet sales manager. The purchasers used more than $1 million in cash to purchase expensive and lavish luxury vehicles from Arledge's dealership such as a 2007 GMC Yukon Denali, a 2007 Cadillac Escalade, a 2006 Maserati Quattorporte and a 2008 Mercedes CL63.

One of Arledge's final purchasers was an undercover IRS agent posing as a drug dealer looking to launder his money through the dealership, according to the indictment.

Arledge, Ham and Thomas would then advise the purchasers "how to structure payments to evade reporting requirements for cash transactions." Ham and Arledge also disguised the nature of the transactions by labeling them as "leases" instead of "purchases" in their accounting practices. Arledge stored the money in a Richardson bank in three separate accounts under the name of "PEGA, Inc.," according to the indictment.


The transactions were then placed under the names of third party individuals including 38-year-old Marcus Dean of Dallas, 29-year-old Jason Palmore of Mansfield, 31-year-old Aqueelah Hayat Waters of Dallas and 3-year-old Kendra Quebec Williams of Dallas. The U.S. Attorney's Office said these third-party defendants all had knowledge of Arledge's actions and gave them permission in order to help him conceal the true identity of the purchasers and the location of the money.

The indictment included a seizure order for 16 vehicles believed to have been used as part of the money laundering conspiracy as well as more than $100,000 in deposit funds and cash from Arledge's business accounts.

Upon conviction, each defendant could receive a prison term in a federal penitentiary not to exceed 20 years and/or a fine not to exceed $500,000 or "not more than the greater of twice the gross gain to the defendant or twice the gross loss to one other than the defendant or both," according to the U.S. Code.

Contact Danny Gallagher at dgallagher@acnpapers.com.



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