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Previous Red River Army Depot Official Pleads Guilty To Bribery
TEXARKANA, Texas - - Another previous Red River Army Depot official has confessed to pay off in a plan including government contracts. 안전놀이터

Louis Edward Singleton, 64, showed up with Texarkana legal counselor Eric Marks before U.S. Justice Judge Caroline Craven Wednesday morning in Texarkana's midtown government building. Singleton entered a liable supplication to a solitary count of pay off, however Assistant U.S. Lawyer Jonathan Hornok depicted Singleton's direct as including "more than one tip."

Singleton was a public authority whose obligations included managing the public authority buy card program at Red River Army Depot. He took hush-money as tickets and stopping passes to an expert football match-up from agents of H&H Enterprises, as indicated by a genuine premise archive recorded for Singleton's situation.

"From before 2010 and going on through basically November 2019, I concurred with Jimmy Scarbrough, C.H., B.H., and Jeffery Harrison to swindle the United States," the report states. "Scarbrough was a boss at [Red River Army Depot] who requested that I endorse buys from H&H Enterprises, Maverick Services, H.C., and others."

The people recognized in court archives with just their initials have not been officially charged.

Singleton acknowledged more than $18,000 in pay-offs, including "in excess of 20 tickets and stopping passes to AT&T Stadium to watch the Dallas Cowboys," the verifiable premise states. "For instance, H&H Enterprises paid $4,599.98 for myself and three visitors to watch from the Hall of Fame area as the Cowboys played the New England Patriots on Oct. 11, 2015."

Singleton faces as long as two years in government jail at condemning. He showed up in court on a request and was permitted to stay free Wednesday with an unstable $10,000 appearance bond set up by Craven.

Scarbrough, the supposed brains of the plan, has argued guiltless to intrigue to cheat the United States, two counts of pay off and a charge of trick to launder cash. His case is planned for a jury preliminary in September before U.S. Locale Judge Robert Schroeder III.

Scarbrough supposedly acknowledged more than $100,000 in cash orders from Harrison and collectible guns from Bishop. The public authority is looking for Scarbrough's relinquishment of a few antique vehicles he supposedly purchased with pay off cash as well as a judgment for more than $300,000.