News
Release
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
January 26, 2007
Lawyer
Sentenced To Prison For Financial Reporting Crime
Used Cash from Drug Dealer to Purchase Laundromat to Launder
Drug Money
JAN
26 -- STEPHEN J. PLOWMAN, 51, of Bellevue, Washington, was
sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Seattle to 18 months in
prison, a $4,000 fine and three years of supervised release for Willful
Failure to Report a Currency Transaction in Excess of $10,000. PLOWMAN,
an attorney, admitted that he received more than $100,000 in cash
from a client to purchase a laundromat in the Queen Anne neighborhood
in Seattle during 2005, and then willfully failed to file a currency
transaction report as required by law documenting his receipt of
that cash. The client, since convicted of conspiracy to distribute
cocaine, wanted the laundromat as a means to launder drug proceeds.
At Sentencing U.S. District Judge Ricardo S. Martinez told PLOWMAN “For
the life of me I can’t see how anyone, let alone an attorney,
could not have realized this was ill gotten gain.”
PLOWMAN
pleaded guilty October 12, 2006, admitting as part of his plea agreement
that his failure to file the currency transaction report was part of
a pattern of unlawful conduct, occurring on more than one occasion,
during a 12-month period. According to the plea agreement, STEPHEN
PLOWMAN was acting as an attorney for Carlos Ford, a cocaine trafficker,
in May of 2005, when Ford wanted to purchase the Queen Anne Maytag
Laundry. The negotiated purchase price was more than $150,000. PLOWMAN
received two cashier’s checks totaling about $56,000 from Ford
towards the purchase price. PLOWMAN deposited these checks in his attorney
trust account. Later, PLOWMAN received close to $120,000 cash to pay
the balance of the cost of the laundromat and expenses. The cash came
from Ford’s cocaine trafficking business and was received by
STEPHEN PLOWMAN from Ford at Ford’s residence in paper bags.
STEPHEN PLOWMAN then took the money to his law office in Bellevue where
he stored it in a safe.
PLOWMAN
did not document his receipt of this currency in any way. Further,
he willfully failed to file a “Report of Cash Payments Over $10,000
Received in a Trade of Business” (IRS Form 8300) with the Internal
Revenue Service, as required by law, documenting his receipt of this
currency from Ford. The 8300 Form requires the recipient of the currency
who is involved in a trade or business, to report the receipt of the
cash, including indicating the identity of the individual from whom
the cash was received, the person on whose behalf such transaction
was conducted, and describing the transaction. Such information assists
the Internal Revenue Service in identifying the illegal movement of
money through the U.S. economy and individuals involved in such activity.
On
June 29, 2005, STEPHEN PLOWMAN met with the owner of the laundromat
to consummate the purchase. At that time, PLOWMAN delivered a check
from his trust account for $60,000 for the laundromat, and handed over
an additional $100,000 in cash, making the total purchase price for
the laundromat $160,000. However, the written purchase and sale agreement
documenting the transaction were drafted by PLOWMAN to reflect a sales
price of only $60,000. The balance of the cash – about $20,000 – was
used for laundromat expenses and for PLOWMAN’s fee.
Judge
Martinez said that PLOWMAN’s criminal conduct enabled the drug
trade, damaging users, their families, neighborhoods and communities.
PLOWMAN’s supporters had written more than sixty letters praising
his good work in the community. Judge Martinez said “the man
I see reflected in those letters would not have facilitated a drug
dealer like Carlos Ford to sell his poison on the street..... Others
need to understand that these crimes cannot be committed by someone
with your intelligence, education and sophistication.”
PLOWMAN
is the fourth attorney in the past year to plead guilty to financial
crimes in connection to drug trafficking. JAMES L. WHITE, 49, a Seattle,
Washington attorney, was sentenced in December 2005, to 18 months in
prison for Money Laundering. In a related case, A. MARK VANDERVEEN,
45, a Seattle, Washington attorney, was sentenced to three months in
prison and six months of home confinement for Failing to File a Currency
Transaction Report as Required by Federal Law. JOEL S. MANALANG, 37,
of Seattle, Washington, pleaded guilty to Money Laundering and was
sentenced in November 2005, to 18 months in prison.
Carlos
Ford, the cocaine distributor, was sentenced in September 2005, to
ten years in prison.
PLOWMAN
was identified as part of the investigation into an organized drug
trafficking ring. That investigation was an Organized Crime and Drug
Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation, providing supplemental
federal funding to the federal and state agencies involved. The case
was investigated by the Drug Enforcement Administration, and was prosecuted
by Assistant United States Attorneys Ron Friedman and Richard Cohen.
For
additional information please contact Emily Langlie, Public Affairs
Officer for the United States Attorney’s Office, at (206) 553-4110. |