Home St. Louis Press Releases 2013 Six Defendants Sentenced to a Total of 36 Years in Prison in National Prearranged Services Case
Info
This is archived material from the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) website. It may contain outdated information and links may no longer function.

Six Defendants Sentenced to a Total of 36 Years in Prison in National Prearranged Services Case

U.S. Attorney’s Office November 14, 2013
  • Eastern District of Missouri

ST. LOUIS, MO—Six defendants were sentenced today before United States District Judge Jean C. Hamilton for their roles in one of the largest frauds ever prosecuted in the Eastern District of Missouri. The defendants were sentenced on more than 40 counts of fraud, money laundering, and related crimes and received a total of 36 years' and one month's incarceration. At sentencing, Judge Hamilton recognized that these defendants, acting through National Prearranged Services Inc. and Lincoln Memorial Life Insurance Company, had defrauded more than 97,000 customers in more than 16 states, hundreds of funeral homes, and multiple financial institutions, causing more than $450 million in losses.

Five of the defendants previously pled guilty to various counts of fraud in June and July of this year, and each of those defendants was sentenced to the terms of imprisonment consistent with their respective plea agreements. Of the defendants who pled guilty, James Douglas Cassity, 67, received the longest sentence of 115 months’ imprisonment after admitting that he organized and led the fraudulent enterprise. The former CEO of Lincoln Memorial Life Insurance Company, Randall K. Sutton, 68, received a sentence of 84 months’ imprisonment. Brent Douglas Cassity, 46, a one-time officer of NPS, received a sentence of 60 months’ imprisonment. Howard A. Wittner, 76, an attorney for the companies, received a sentence of 36 months’ imprisonment. Former NPS President Sharon Nekol Province, 69, received a sentence of 18 months’ imprisonment.

One defendant, David Wulf, 61, the statutorily appointed independent investment adviser entrusted to oversee the prearranged funeral trusts established in Missouri, faced trial in August and was convicted by a jury on 18 counts of bank fraud, wire fraud, and wire fraud affecting a financial institution. Wulf was sentenced to 10 years in prison.

“Honest and law abiding citizens are fed up with the likes of those who use deceit and fraud to line their pockets with other people’s money,” said Sybil Smith, Special Agent in Charge of IRS-Criminal Investigation.

“This is the largest corporate fraud case prosecuted in the Eastern District of Missouri,” said Dean C. Bryant, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI St. Louis Division. “This case affects us all because part of the life insurance premium we pay goes to cover such loss from fraud.”

These sentences mark the culmination of a multi-year investigation and prosecution that brought together three federal law enforcement agencies, numerous state regulatory agencies, and the Department of Justice to unravel a complex and immense fraud that spanned more than 15 years. According to court documents and testimony presented at trial, beginning as early as 1992 and continuing until 2008, NPS sold prearranged funeral contracts in several states, including Missouri, Illinois, and Ohio. During that time, insurance companies affiliated with NPS issued life insurance policies related to those prearranged funeral contacts. As part of the contracts, the total price for funeral services and merchandise for an individual was agreed upon and that price would remain constant regardless of when the funeral services and merchandise would be needed. Customers entering into prearranged funeral contracts would usually pay a single sum of money up‐front to NPS either directly or through a funeral home that was also a party to the contract. NPS represented to individual customers, funeral homes, and state regulators that funds paid by customers under the prearranged funeral contracts would be kept in a secure trust or insurance policy as required under state law.

Court documents disclose, however, that NPS made use of funds paid by customers in ways that were inconsistent both with its prior and continuing representations and with the applicable state laws and regulations. Instead, NPS operated as a fraudulent Ponzi‐like scheme, where customer funds were neither kept safe in bank trusts or insurance policies but instead were utilized for unauthorized purposes and the personal enrichment of NPS’s officers and others. In turn, new business became the source of funding for funerals that prior customers had previously paid for in advance. Victims of the scheme include individual customers, funeral homes, and state insurance guarantee associations across the country.

This case was investigated by Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, and the Postal Inspection Service. Assistant United States Attorneys Steven Muchnick, Charles Birmingham, and Richard Finneran prosecuted the case for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

This content has been reproduced from its original source.