“[P]erhaps this was not the first time you did this because you did it so easily. And there is evidence before the court that you have done it before.”
 
-- Neal B. Biggers Jr.,
Judge, Federal District Court for the
Northern District of Mississippi


High-Profile Attorney Gets 5 Years For Judicial Bribery Scheme
 
HOLBROOK MOHR
 
June 27, 2008
 

OXFORD, Miss. — Richard "Dickie" Scruggs, the attorney who built his career by taking on tobacco, asbestos and insurance companies, was sentenced Friday to five years in prison for conspiring to bribe a judge.

U.S. District Judge Neal Biggers Jr. called Scruggs' conduct "reprehensible" and fined him $250,000. The judge handed down the full sentence requested by prosecutors despite arguments from the defense for half that time in prison.

Scruggs appeared to nearly faint as the federal judge scolded him for his conduct. Some people in the courtroom gasped as Scruggs started to sway side to side and his attorney grabbed his arm to steady him. He had to be seated before the sentence was read.

"I could not be more ashamed where I am today, mixed up in a judicial bribery scheme," Scruggs told the judge.

The judge said that after reviewing evidence in the case, including secretly recorded conversations, "it made me think perhaps this was not the first time you did this because you did it so easily. And there is evidence before the court that you have done it before."

Prosecutors are looking into another alleged bribery conspiracy in which Scruggs is accused of trying to influence a different judge in a dispute over legal fees from asbestos cases. Scruggs' former defense attorney has pleaded guilty in that case and is cooperating with investigators.

Scruggs must report to prison by Aug. 4 and pay the fine in one lump sum within 30 days.

He requested to serve his time at the federal prison camp in Pensacola, Fla., the same minimum securiy prison where another prominent Mississippi attorney and Scruggs associate, Paul Minor, is serving an 11-year sentence for bribing two state court judges.

Scruggs gained fame in the 1990s by using a corporate insider against tobacco companies in lawsuits that resulted in a $206 billion settlement. That case was portrayed in the 1999 film "The Insider."

Scruggs was indicted in November along with his son and a law partner after an associate wore a wire for the FBI and secretly recorded conversations about the alleged bribery.

Scruggs initially denied wrongdoing. But in March, Scruggs and former law partner Sidney Backstrom pleaded guilty to conspiring to bribe Lafayette County Circuit Court Judge Henry Lackey with $50,000.

"You picked the wrong man to try to bribe," Biggers said of Lackey, who reported the bribe attempt to authorities.

Prosecutors say Scruggs wanted a favorable ruling in a dispute over $26.5 million in legal fees from a mass settlement of Hurricane Katrina insurance cases.

Scruggs' son, Zach Scruggs, pleaded guilty to misprision of a felony, meaning he knew a crime was committed but didn't report it. He is to be sentenced next week.

U.S. Attorney Jim Greenlee called the case "profoundly sad" but declined to comment further because the investigation is ongoing.

Scruggs' former defense attorney, Joey Langston of Booneville, has pleaded guilty to trying to influence Hinds County Judge Bobby DeLaughter in the asbestos fee case by promising that Scruggs could help DeLaughter get appointed to the federal bench with the help of U.S. Sen. Trent Lott, Scruggs' brother-in-law.

Many high-profile friends had sought leniency for Scruggs in letters to the federal judge, including Former "60 Minutes" producer Lowell Bergman and tobacco industry whistleblower Jeffrey Wigand, both portrayed in "The Insider."

Scruggs left the red brick courthouse without comment and drove away with his family and attorney.

 
Copyright 2008, The Associated Press
 

 
From: The Associated Press, June 27, 2008, published by AOL News, accessed 06/27/08.  A shortened version appeared in New York Lawyer, June 27, 2008, http://www.nylawyer.com/display.php/file=/news/08/06/062708b, accessed 07/05/08.  Reprinted in accordance with the "fair use" provision of Title 17 U.S.C. § 107 for a non-profit educational purpose.
 

 
BECOMING A JUDGE, PART 4
 
 
 
MISSISSIPPI JUSTICE