Security News: Former Alabama Correctional Sergeant Indicted for Assaulting Inmates and Falsifying Report

Source: United States Department of Justice

The Justice Department today announced that a federal grand jury sitting in Montgomery, Alabama, returned a four-count indictment charging former Alabama Department of Corrections (ADOC) Sergeant Lorenzo Mills, 55, with assaulting three compliant inmates with a wooden baton at ADOC’s Draper Correctional Facility. Mills is also charged with falsification of records for submitting a false written statement in connection with the incident.

The indictment alleges that on Oct. 25, 2020, Mills, while acting in his official capacity as a Correctional Sergeant with ADOC, subjected three inmates to cruel and unusual punishment by striking them with a wooden baton, and that the assault caused bodily injury and involved the use of a dangerous weapon. The indictment further alleges that Mills submitted a false written statement in connection with the incident. Specifically, the indictment alleges that Mills falsely wrote in his statement that he had not used any force against the three inmate victims.

Mills faces a statutory maximum sentence of 10 years in prison for each of the civil rights charges and 20 years in prison for the obstruction of justice offense.

Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke of the Justice Department’s Civil Rights Division and U.S. Attorney Sandra J. Stewart for the Middle District of Alabama made the announcement. This case is being investigated by the FBI’s Mobile Field Division and ADOC’s Law Enforcement Services Division. It is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Eric Counts of the Middle District of Alabama, and Trial Attorneys David Reese and Nikhil Ramnaney of the Civil Rights Division.

An indictment is merely an allegation and all defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

Security News: Assistant Attorney General Kristen Clarke Delivers Remarks in Commemoration of Earth Day

Source: United States Department of Justice

Remarks as Prepared

Thank you, Assistant Attorney General Todd Kim, for inviting me to this Earth Day event. It is an honor to work in partnership with you to advance the cause of environmental justice. As you noted, every person should have access to clean water and clean air, for themselves and their children. And access to healthier natural resources and spaces should not be selectively available to only the most privileged people in our nation.

We know well that this is a critically important environmental issue. It is also a civil rights issue. Today, communities of color disproportionately bear the brunt of health problems and other types of harm caused by pollution and inadequate infrastructure. Nationally, Black Americans are 75% more likely than other Americans to live in a fence-line community near hazardous waste. They are exposed to 1.5 times as much air pollution. This is why advancing environmental justice through enforcement of our nation’s civil rights laws is a top priority for the Justice Department.

When it comes to environmental justice, we know that disparities exist from communities that stretch between California and New York, and from Washington, D.C. down to Alabama. That’s why we are putting laws like Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to work. Title VI prohibits recipients of federal funds from discriminating on the basis of race, color or national origin, and from administering programs in any manner that results in a discriminatory impact or in discriminatory treatment. Last year, we launched an investigation into whether the Public Health Departments of Alabama and Lowndes County, Alabama, have engaged in unlawful racial discrimination.

Lowndes County lies between Selma and Montgomery in an area that has historically been called the “Black Belt.” Lowndes County residents are predominantly Black and low-income, with a median household income of roughly $30,000. Many of these residents do not have access to the municipal sewer system or septic systems, and we are investigating the state and county’s operations, policies and practices related to wastewater disposal and sanitation. This investigation marked the Department of Justice’s first Title VI environmental justice investigation.

The Civil Rights Division is committed to standing in partnership with the Environmental and Natural Resources Division to use our federal laws to confront our country’s legacy of environmental injustice. I thank you all for the work that you do every day to advance the ideals of environmental justice, and look forward to continuing the fight for justice and equity in all communities across this county.

Defense News: Remarks by CNO Gilday at the Pallas Foundation for National Security Leadership Dinner

Source: United States Navy

ADMIRAL MICHAEL M. GILDAY:  Sally and Tony, thanks for hosting tonight, and for bringing together a group of technologists, aspiring technologists, and military officers to get to know each other a little bit better and to talk about some of the challenges that we’re facing. On behalf of senior military leaders here tonight, thank you.  Thanks for having us.­­

And I wanted to – I was thinking about, you know, when we first joined years ago.  The paradigm then with respect to research and development in this country was that most of it was either done by the government or subsidized heavily by the U.S. government.  And now that paradigm doesn’t – (inaudible).  And what that’s meant for us is that it’s meant opportunity for us to really leverage some of the innovation and great ideas that you have.  In a – in a military system which things are typically driven by requirements, what we see these days is you’re opening our eyes to solutions to problems that we haven’t even considered yet.

And so I’d just like to briefly talk about three vignettes, things that have happened over the past year.  Some of you have been directly involved in this work, others I’m sure are going to help us in the future solve some of these problems.

But in one case, we recently held the largest unmanned exercise in the world in the Middle East.  And we had about a hundred different unmanned platforms, we had 10 different countries participating, and dozens of companies – many of them small startups – that came together.  And the problem to solve was how to provide maritime domain awareness or how to provide sensing across the Red Sea for our regional partners in that area, who maybe have on a – on a regular basis five or six ships today in a battlespace that’s about the size of the state of California.  So a parallel would be think about patrolling the state of California with five or six police cars.

And so the solution set, obviously, is unmanned, but it’s tied together – if I could just divert for a second and talk about Tesla as the digital native, and the – and their company in the automobile industry is the one to catch.  And how there are many different companies that, obviously, have a ton of different platforms – Volkswagen, Ford, et cetera – that they can – that they want to operate autonomously, but the real magic sauce, obviously, is the AI software integration, right, they can plug into any one of those platforms.

And so with this exercise, bringing together dozens of companies with hundreds of platforms, along with AI developers – they were from different companies.  And we bring them together to create solution sets on how we can not only better sense the environment, but also make sense of the environment and push that data back to regional operations centers where they’re much better off than they were a few months ago in terms of understanding illegal fishing or the illicit transfer of weapons and people.  So one example.

Another would be the network required to connect all of that stuff together, not only now but in the future when unmanned systems are going to proliferate.  And how do we connect manned and unmanned systems together in a way where we can move data – any data over any system in a software-defined, resilient architecture that allows us, at speed, to use that data in way to have decision superiority over an opponent?  So it’s leveraging networks that we have now.  It’s leveraging them in a way we never had.  It’s packaging data in a way that we’re leveraging the best ideas out there from companies like yours.  And it’s making a real difference for us and I think will make a real difference for us in the future.

And the last example I’d give you is on some of the live virtual constructive training that we’re doing, where we’re actually leveraging the gaming community, principally out of Orlando, Florida.  And they’re helping us take hundreds of ships and aircraft, ground elements, whether they’re special operators or whether they’re Marine elements ashore in Camp Lejeune or whether they’re Army tanks, and tying them all together in a virtual environment.

To give you an example, in a recent exercise taking the geography off of Norway and superimposing that off the coastlines of Virginia and North Carolina.  And then you have ships and aircraft that are actually – and submarines – that are operating in that battlespace, but you’re virtually tying in ships that are tied to a pier, or Marines that are ashore, or Army operators that are ashore.  Or, instructively, you’re taking ships that are in the Indian Ocean and you’re transporting them into that battlespace.  And so you can operate as a fleet, as a joint force at a scale that we never had before.

And so there’s no way that we could afford to get all of that stuff underway in the air, on the sea, under the sea at any given time.  And so to leverage the technology that you’re bringing to bear, and to do this in a very powerful way that’s changing how we think about – how we think about deterring and fighting in the future, has been enormously helpful.  So, as we serve the first course here, I just want to say thanks for what you’re doing and what you continue to do.

And just a real quick shameless plug for our entry – our entry points into how we’re trying to make this easier for your companies and others to plug into us.  And so for the Air Force, it’s AFWERX.  For the Navy and the Marine Corps, it’s Naval X.  And for the Army, I believe, it would be Army Futures Command.  So those are the tech bridges that allow you to more easily connect with our operators, and do quick-turn stuff in a dev ops environment that, again, makes a difference.  So, Sally, Tony, thanks again.

Security News: Mexican Posse Gang Members Sentenced to Federal Prison for Narcotics Trafficking

Source: United States Department of Justice News

United States Attorney Richard G. Frohling of the Eastern District of Wisconsin announced that on April 21, 2022, U.S. District Judge J.P. Stadtmueller sentenced two Milwaukee men, both of whom identified as Mexican Posse gang members, to federal prison for drug and firearm offenses.

The court sentenced Louis R. Perez III (age: 25) to twenty-one (21) years’ imprisonment and five years’ supervised release after Perez III pled guilty to conspiracy to distribute and the possession with intent to distribute controlled substances, in violation of Title 21, United States Code, Sections 846, 841(a)(1) and (b)(1)(A); and possession of firearms in furtherance of a drug trafficking crime, in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 924(c)(1)(A)(i).  

Perez III’s conviction and sentence stem from his leadership of a violent, nationwide drug trafficking organization that obtained multi-kilogram quantities of cocaine, heroin, and marijuana for distribution in the Milwaukee area. According to court records, Perez III, also known as “Eight Ball,” often obtained controlled substances from California and shipped drug proceeds through the U.S. Postal Service to co-conspirators in California. This drug trafficking organization was comprised of some individuals identifying as Mexican Posse gang members, including Perez III.

The court also sentenced Antonio Rodriguez (age: 23), a codefendant of Perez III, to fifteen (15) years of imprisonment. Rodriguez, also a known Mexican Posse gang member, was sentenced after pleading guilty to drug and firearm charges in relation to this trafficking organization.

As a result of this investigation, law enforcement officers seized approximately 45 firearms, 8.6 kilograms of cocaine, 700 grams of heroin, 4.4 kilograms of marijuana, 4,500 kilograms of marijuana oils, and 21.9 kilograms of filled marijuana vape cartridges. 

The defendants were charged based on a long-term investigation led by law enforcement agents and officers from the North Central High Intensity Drug Trafficking Area (HIDTA), the Wisconsin Department of Justice, Division of Criminal Investigations, the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA), the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the Waukesha County Sheriff’s Office, the Milwaukee Police Department, and the Greenfield Police Department. 

# #  #

For further information contact: Public Information Officer:

Kenneth.Gales@usdoj.gov

(414) 297-1700

Follow us on Twitter

Security News: State College Man Sentenced To 15 Months’ Imprisonment For Failure To Pay Over $1 Million In Employment Taxes

Source: United States Department of Justice News

WILLIAMSPORT- The United States Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Pennsylvania announced that Scott Lykens, age 44, of State College, Pennsylvania, was sentenced yesterday to 15 months’ imprisonment by Chief District Court Judge Matthew W. Brann for a criminal tax violation. Chief Judge Brann also ordered Lykens to pay restitution to the IRS in the amount of $1,044,796.

According to United States Attorney John C. Gurganus, Lykens previously entered a guilty plea in December 2021, to failure to pay over employment taxes.  Lykens was the owner of a medical billing company, Keystone Medical Management Systems, doing business in Centre County, Pennsylvania. From 2010 through 2019, Lykens collected tax withholdings, including federal income taxes, Medicare, and Social Security taxes, from his employees but did not remit them to the Internal Revenue Service for a total tax loss of $1,044,796. 

This case was investigated by the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division.  Assistant U.S. Attorney Geoffrey W. MacArthur is prosecuting the case.

# # #