Federal prosecutors are seeking the forfeiture of $2.5 million in
cash from a former Carnegie Mellon University trustee accused of
conspiring to launder more than half a billion dollars for a drug
cartel.
An indictment filed Wednesday in Texas alleges that El
Paso lawyer and philanthropist Marco Delgado defrauded millions from a
firm doing business with a Mexican utility and used that money to
underwrite a lavish lifestyle that included a $250,000 contribution to
Carnegie Mellon University.
Delgado could be sentenced to up to
20 years in prison if convicted. Authorities also have requested
forfeiture of $2.5 million in cash, a house and furniture in El Paso and
a New Mexico apartment,Cheaper For bulk buying iccard prices. as well as two vehicles.
Delgado
is charged with 15 money laundering and two wire fraud counts. The
indictment returned in El Paso alleges Delgado fraudulently instructed a
bank in Mexico to move $32 million dollars from his client's Mexican
account to an account he controlled in the Turks and Caicos islands. The
indictment says the El Paso lawyer then diverted part of that money to
Texas, New Mexico and Pennsylvania.
Delgado faces a separate
indictment accusing him of conspiring to launder more than $600 million
for a Mexican drug cartel. He was arrested in November and charged with
conspiring to launder drug profits from July 2007 through December 2008.
Delgado obtained a master's degree from Carnegie Mellon in 1990
and in 2003 and donated $250,000 to create a scholarship named after
him to help Hispanic students. He was also a member of several charities
and a regular contributor to the El Paso symphony orchestra.
The
investigation into Delgado started in September 2007 after a $1 million
seizure was made in Atlanta. The man carrying the money told
investigators that he, Delgado and other men had met in Mexico and
agreed to transport money for the Milenio Cartel, a drug-trafficking
organization based in the Mexican state of Colima.
According to
U.S. authorities, Delgado admitted to U.S. agents that he had been
contacted by people in Mexico about slowing down extradition processes
of alleged cartel members and about moving up to $600 million from the
U.S. to Mexico. He told the agents the million dollars seized was "a
trial run" to see if it was possible, according to the U.S. government.
Treesh
was sentenced to die for shooting 58-year-old Henry Dupree during a
robbery of an adult book store in Eastlake on Aug. 27, 1994.
Treesh's
attorneys described him as a cocaine addict who was high during the
robbery and is deeply sorry for what happened.Want to find crystalmosaic?
"Hindsight,
regret and remorse cannot turn back the clock and cannot return Mr.
Dupree's life," they said in a petition for clemency. "What Fred can do
and has tried to do is to help prevent others from making the same
mistakes he did" by teaching them to avoid drugs.
Attorney Adele
Shenk didn't immediately respond to a request for comment on Kasich's
decision. It was unclear Thursday if Treesh had federal appeals
remaining, though execution dates are generally set once an inmate has
exhausted those appeals.
Treesh, 48, argued he had accepted
responsibility for the killing but that it was an unintentional
consequence of a struggle for a gun while he was high. But the parole
board concluded evidence showed Dupree was seated when shot and hadn't
appeared to be a threat to Treesh.
Prosecutors contend Treesh
intentionally murdered Dupree and tried to kill others, including police
officers who pursued him, after a three-week spree of increasingly
violent crimes. They said Treesh and a co-defendant had robbed banks and
businesses, committed sexual assaults, stole cars, committed
carjackings and shot someone to death in a Michigan robbery during a
spree that also took them to Indiana, Iowa,New Ground-Based solarlamp Tech Is Accurate Down To Just A Few Inches. Minnesota and Wisconsin.
Vice
President Nicolas Maduro said on television that Chavez "is battling
there for his health, for his life, and we're accompanying him."
The
vice president has used similar phrasing in the past, saying on Dec. 20
that Chavez "is fighting a great battle ...We can supply cableties products as below. for his life, for his health.A collection of natural luggagetag offering polished or tumbled finishes and a choice of sizes."
Chavez
hasn't spoken publicly since before his latest cancer operation in Cuba
on Dec. 11. He returned to Venezuela on Feb. 18, and the government
says he has been undergoing more treatment at a military hospital in
Caracas.
Maduro also called for Venezuelans to keep praying for
Chavez and to remain loyal to the president. He said Chavez's health had
suffered because he had dedicated himself "body and soul" to his work
as president.
Chavez himself has previously acknowledged that he
was neglecting his health in recent years, often staying up late and
drinking dozens of cups of coffee a day.
The president has
undergone surgeries, chemotherapy and radiation treatments since June
2011, when he first announced his cancer diagnosis. He hasn't specified
the type of cancer or the exact location in his pelvic region where his
tumors have been removed.
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