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FORT WORTH, Texas (AP) —
A Texas funeral home owner whose business was to be featured in a reality TV show was convicted Wednesday of accepting money to care for bodies but failing to do so before the mortuary abruptly closed.
Deondre Johnson was convicted on two felony theft counts by a Tarrant County jury. He faced up to two years in state jail for theft. He's expected to be tried later on seven counts of abuse of a corpse in the same case.
The Johnson Family Mortuary drew attention in June 2014 with the announcement of a planned reality TV show, about running a funeral home and dealing with death on a daily basis.
The business closed the following month due to nonpayment of rent. Investigators who later went through the mortuary found several bodies in advanced stages of decomposition, with some remains difficult to identify.
Johnson accepted payment then failed to provide services such as cremation, according to prosecutors. Johnson was responsible for making sure that the correct ashes were delivered to relatives. Johnson lied to some customers and gave them the wrong sets of ashes, according to prosecutor Sid Mody.
"Mr. Johnson was playing a Ponzi scheme with human flesh," Mody said during closing arguments.
Johnson, who did not testify, left the running of the mortuary to his wife, co-owner Rachel Hardy-Johnson, according to his attorneys.
"Rachel ran the show," said defense attorney Alexander Kim. "She's the one who signs the leases. She's the one who pays the bills. It stops with her. It's a family run business. But she's the boss."
Hardy-Johnson pleaded guilty in January to felony food stamp fraud and was sentenced in June to two years in federal prison. She also awaits state trial on charges of theft and abuse of a corpse.
NEW ORLEANS (AP) —
A panel on Wednesday approved using $134 million provided by energy giant BP PLC on 10 projects to help the Gulf of Mexico recover from a catastrophic 2010 oil spill.
The approval came from a trustee council made up of Gulf coast states and federal officials overseeing ecological restoration from the offshore spill. About $126 million will go to projects to help sea turtles, fish, vegetation and birds and $8 million on enhancing recreational uses.
In 2011, BP offered to spend $1 billion to spur the recovery of the Gulf, anticipating future restoration costs meted out through the courts. BP is expected to spend billions of dollars more on restoration.
An April 2010 blowout at a well BP and its contractors were drilling touched off the worst offshore oil spill in U.S. history. The explosion and fire aboard the Deepwater Horizon rig killed 11 workers and crews took nearly three months afterward to cap the leak, which some experts estimated at more than 130 million gallons of oil.
So far, with these new projects included, about $832 million of the $1 billion has been awarded. The projects were announced previously in April.
The largest amount of money — more than $45 million — will go to measures to protect sea turtles, which are considered threatened and endangered throughout U.S. waters. The April 2010 spill hit turtles hard, in particular a species of small turtles known as the Kemp's ridley turtle.
The new money will be spent over 10 years on finding Kemp's ridley turtle nests in Texas and Mexico, helping turtles that are nesting, rescuing turtles in distress and getting shrimp fishermen to avoid catching sea turtles in their nets.
The next largest amount of money — $30 million — is for projects along the Mississippi coast. That money will be used to build about 272 acres of reefs and 4 miles of breakwaters. Scientists expect that these spots will over time become fertile marine grounds and enhance the growth of oysters, shrimp, crabs and other species. Scientists also say the breakwaters will reduce shoreline erosion and marsh loss. Alabama is to receive about $10 million for similar projects.
Meanwhile, about $20.6 million will be spent on bird nesting areas in Texas. This project will restore and protect three islands in Galveston Bay and one in East Matagorda Bay to provide more nesting habitat for brown pelicans, gulls, great blue herons, roseate spoonbills and other birds.
Another $20 million will pay fishermen to set aside long lines during the six-month bluefin tuna spawning season and use other gear. The program is expected to last between five and 10 years.
Longline boats use up to 40 miles of baited hooks to fish for yellowfin tuna and swordfish, but also haul up sharks, bluefin tuna and marlin. Bluefin tuna, which can weigh a quarter-ton and sell for thousands of dollars, have been severely overfished, particularly to feed a worldwide market for sushi.
BROWNSVILLE, Texas –
Miguel Echevarria-Zuniga, 51, and Miguel Echevarria-Guizar, 22, have been ordered to federal prison following their convictions of manufacturing marijuana, announced U.S. Attorney Kenneth Magidson. The father and son pleaded guilty April 3, 2015.
Today, U.S. District Judge U.S. District Andrew S. Hanen handed Echevarria-Guizar a total of 36 months in federal prison. Echevarria-Zuniga was sentenced last month to serve 42 months for the marijuana charge and for being an alien found in the United States after having been deported. Both men are expected to face deportation proceedings following their release from prison.
The convictions stem from an August 2014 alien smuggling investigation by Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) which revealed that part of a 40-acre tract of land in a rural area of Willacy County was being used to grow marijuana. Agents discovered more than 9,000 marijuana plants growing in the field.
Agents arrested the Echevarrias, both Mexican citizens, as they attempted to abscond from the area. Initially, the Echevarrias denied any involvement with marijuana field and claimed to be part of a group of illegal aliens that were being housed in a different part of the land. However, fingerprint analysis linked both defendants to items found in the marijuana field. Agents also searched a storage shed which was rented by Echevarria-Zuniga and found sales receipts for items found in the marijuana field.
Both men have been and will remain in custody pending transfer to a U.S. Bureau of Prisons facility to be determined in the near future.
This case was investigated by HSI and prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Israel Cano III and David A. Coronado.