Guilty Plea in Million-Dollar-Plus Check Kiting Case
Friday, February 5, 2010 at 6:00PM BROWNSVILLE, TX—Jeff Woodard, Jr., 48, of Harlingen, Texas, has pleaded guilty to defrauding three local banks by means of a check kiting scheme, United States Attorney Tim Johnson announced today.
At a hearing before United States District Judge Andrew S. Hanen, Woodard pleaded guilty to one count of bank fraud, admitting he operated a check kite scheme involving four bank accounts held in the names of several of his former businesses. The scheme resulted in combined total of more than a million-dollar loss affecting three local banks.
A check kite exists when a person passes checks back and forth between banks before the checks have time to clear to create the appearance that the bank customer has more money in the accounts than he actually does. A check is written on one bank and deposited in a second bank. Checks not backed by sufficient collectable funds are written from the second bank (or a third bank) and deposited with the first bank to mask the fact that there are insufficient funds to pay the initial check. The process continues until the kite is discovered.
Woodard operated Harlingen Imports, also known as Competition Car and Truck Center, in Harlingen, Texas; Competition Chrysler Dodge Jeep and Competition RGV in Raymondville, Texas; and Competition Motor Sports, with locations in Harlingen, Texas, and McAllen, Texas. The check kite scheme covered the period from Nov. 1, 2004 through Jan. 30, 2006.
In this case, Woodard or persons acting under his direction wrote multiple checks on one account and deposited them with another of the three banking institutions daily. There was no legitimate business reason for the vast majority of the checks to be written. The checks were all written in whole dollar amounts, typically in even hundreds, and were typically sequential. Woodard signed about half of the checks. Others were signed by employees or business partners, acting under his direction. The number and size of the checks dwarfed the reported revenues of the three businesses combined.
Over the time period covered by the FBI’s detailed computer analysis, October 2005 through December 2005, Woodard was responsible for kiting resulting in an actual loss of approximately $1.6 million.
The maximum statutory penalty is 30 years' imprisonment, a $1 million fine, and five years of supervised release. Sentencing is set for May 10, 2010 at 8:30 a.m. before Judge Hanen.
This case was investigated by the FBI and is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael Wynne and Israel Cano.
NOTICE - All Rights Reserved Except as Stipulated Below. PHOTOS MAY NOT BE REPRODUCED IN ANY FORM. Our reporters and journalists break or report stories and their sources and information are protected by the doctrine of free press as expressed in the First Ammendment, Reporters Privilege Statues, and also the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.This article if a feature or opinion piece is the opinion of the author or reports the news and opinions of others and is NOT INTENDED TO OFFER ADVICE. FOR OPINION STORIES: This story/article/ feature may be an opinion piece — and should be treated accordingly — or reporting on the opinions of others, and should never be considered as a sole source of information or as a suggestion, instruction or prescription. FOR CRIME STORIES: always read the word "allegedly" in any story mentioning "suspects" or "persons of interest". FOR BUSINESSS AND MONEY STORIES: For money/ trade and exchange stories, this magazine and its writers accept no responsibility for accuracy — always check with other sources for important decisions. FOR HEALTH AND LIFESTYLE STORIES: In the case of food/health stories, these facts have not been evaluated by the United States Food and Drug Administration (FDA). Information stated here should be NOT be considered as medical, health, psychological or behavior advice. All information in this story and on this site is provided for educational or entertainment purposes ONLY. Always seek the advice of experts, including doctors for medical opinions. Only a licensed medical doctor can offer medical advice. FOR EXPERT, ADVICE OR HOW-TO STORIES: Legal advice or other expert advice is best referred to experts in their respective fields. NO RESPONSIBILITY: The publishers and editors, authors, researchers, employees, heirs and assigns accept no responsibility whatsoever for any advice, facts, opinions in this story, nor for resulting actions of readers of this information. ALL READERS ACCEPT THAT THIS INFORMATION IS PRESENTED ONLY AS NEWS, EDUCATION, ENTERTAINMENT OR OPINION/INFORMATION AND AGREE IN READING THIS STORY OR THIS SITE THAT USE OF THIS INFORMATION IS SOLELY THE RESPONSIBILITY OF THE READER. Copyright by the byline author unless otherwise indicated. EXCERPTS from other magazines or media sources are posted under fair use doctrine, on the basis of no more than 5-10% of content with links and credit to source for the complete story. These are posted in the interest of providing interesting links (description as excerpt) with navigation to the source. Likewise, we encourage our many subscribers to excerpt with credit and links to our e-zines, up to 10% of content. To use more content than 10%, please contact the e-zine for permission. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED except as stipulated herein. IMPORTANT: this web content also includes a forum and comments function, which allows for posting from users not employed by this publication. We accept no responsibility for posts, content, language or accuracy of posts from outside parties but will attempt to correct any inaccuracies reported within the context of free speach. Where possible, spam, lewd or obscene comments WILL BE REMOVED.
Persona Corp. and Blogertize publishes several webzines, magazines, e-zines for news, entertainment and information, but cautions readers to read the NOTICE above:
* Secure Network News Sponsored Advertisers Jameson Bank – Canada's "It's Taken Care Of" Bank Amer.com – Technology for Life











Reader Comments