Home Omaha Press Releases 2012 Coggon Farmer Pleads Guilty to $6 Million Fraud
Info
This is archived material from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) website. It may contain outdated information and links may no longer function.

Coggon Farmer Pleads Guilty to $6 Million Fraud

U.S. Attorney’s Office March 12, 2012
  • Northern District of Iowa (319) 363-6333

A hog farmer who defrauded a northeast Iowa bank pled guilty today in federal court in Cedar Rapids.

David LeClere, age 58, from Coggon, Iowa, was convicted of one count of bank fraud.

At the plea hearing and in a written plea agreement, LeClere admitted engaging in a scheme to defraud a northeast Iowa bank from approximately March 2007 through May 2009. LeClere admitted he defrauded the bank by knowingly providing the bank with false information each month, falsely inflating the number and weight of his hogs and falsely inflating his accounts receivable by reporting that packing plants owed him more money than they did. LeClere further admitted defrauding the bank by redepositing on multiple occasions checks he had received as payment from packing plants. The bank lost at least $6.9 million through the fraudulent scheme.

Sentencing before United States District Court Chief Judge Linda R. Reade will be set after a presentence report is prepared. LeClere remains free on bond pending sentencing. LeClere faces a possible maximum sentence of 30 years’ imprisonment, a $12 million fine, $100 in special assessments, and five years of supervised release following any imprisonment.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney C.J. Williams and was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Court file information is available at https://ecf.iand.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/login.pl. The case file number is 12-cr-00011-LRR.

This content has been reproduced from its original source.