ATLANTIC
DAILY SENTINEL
Atlantic County New Jersey
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Pleasantville "Bagman" for Corrupt Payments
Sentenced to 12 Months in Prison
Submitted by the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey
Jan. 29, 2009
CAMDEN – A Pleasantville man was sentenced to 12 months in federal
prison today for his
conviction on charges of assisting former Pleasantville Board of Education
member Maurice
“Pete” Callaway in the receipt of cash bribes, Acting U.S.
Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr.
announced.
U.S. District Judge Jerome B. Simandle, who presided over the six-day
trial, also ordered Louis
Servon Mister, 58, to serve three years of supervised release upon the
completion of his prison
term. Judge Simandle continued Mister’s release on a $200,000 unsecured
bond pending his
surrender to the U.S. Bureau of Prison on April 13.
On May 14, 2008, after five hours of deliberations, a jury convicted Mister
of one count of
aiding and abetting the attempted obstruction of commerce by extortion
under color of official
right and one count of accepting and agreeing to accept a bribe.
The jury convicted Mister of aiding and abetting Callaway’s receipt
of corrupt cash payments,
which Callaway accepted in exchange for using his official position to
steer Pleasantville Board
of Education roofing business to a cooperating witness. During the trial,
the jury heard
testimony that the defendant accepted two cash payments of $1,500 each
from the cooperating
witness, which the defendant then gave to Callaway.
Callaway pleaded guilty on Nov. 1, 2007, before Judge Simandle to attempted
extortion under
color of official right; his sentencing is pending. At his plea hearing,
Callaway admitted that on
June 5, 2006, he directed Mister to accept the two separate corrupt cash
payments on his behalf.
Callaway admitted that the corrupt payments were paid to him, through
Mister. Callaway is
scheduled to be sentenced by Judge Simandle on Feb. 6.
In determining the actual sentence, Judge Simandle consulted the advisory
U.S. Sentencing
Guidelines, which provide appropriate sentencing ranges that take into
account the severity and
characteristics of the offense, the defendant's criminal history, if any,
and other factors. Judge
Simandle is not bound by the guidelines in determining a sentence.
Parole has been abolished in the federal system. Defendants who are given
custodial terms must
serve nearly all that time.
Marra credited Special Agents of the FBI, under the direction of Special
Agent in Charge
Weysan Dun, for the investigation leading to the conviction. He also credited
prosecutors and
investigators with the Atlantic County Prosecutor’s Office, under
the direction of Prosecutor
Theodore F.L. Housel, for their assistance in the investigation.
The government was represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jenny R. Kramer
and Christopher
J. Gramiccioni of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Special Prosecutions
Division in Newark.
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