NEVADA, Mo. — A judge sentenced a Nevada man this week to 30 years in
prison for his role in a $1.2 million swindle of an elderly woman.
Circuit
Judge David Munton assessed Christopher I. Buller the prison term at a
sentencing hearing Tuesday in Vernon County Circuit Court. A jury had
found the 40-year-old defendant guilty of a Class A felony count of
financial exploitation of an elderly person in a trial the first week of
April.
Buller's co-defendant in the case, Eric S. Davis, 41, of
Joplin, pleaded guilty a year ago to a reduced Class B felony count of
financial exploitation of an elderly person and was sentenced to 10
years in prison.
The
two men deceived a Nevada woman into selling all her stock in a major
oil company to help bail Davis out of a supposed financial obligation to
a trucking company and legal trouble with a court in Kansas City.
Davis
befriended the woman in January 2011 and she paid for him to attend a
truck driver training school, where he rolled a truck into a ditch after
just three days in the program. Although he was never a truck driver or
an employee of the company that ran the school, Davis told the woman
that he was employed by it and needed money to pay for the truck he
wrecked.
Buller assisted Davis by calling her and posing as a company employee with information about the amount of payments due.
Davis subsequently extended his deceit of the woman by telling her
that he needed to pay large sums of money to a judge in Kansas City to
avoid serving jail time for a past debt. Davis provided her with the
fictitious name of "Judge Henry Copeland," and Buller assisted him in
that part of the swindle by telephoning her and posing as the judge.
According
to a probable-cause affidavit filed in the case, Davis would meet the
victim outside her bank or in store parking lots, and she would bring
him boxes or bags full of cash.
The
swindle came to light at a guardianship hearing in July 2014 when she
testified that she had sold all her stock in the oil company and gave
the money to Davis so he could take it to the judge in Kansas City. An
examination of her living trust account by an investigator with the
Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services determined that
between January 2011 and February 2012, she'd made 16 cash withdrawals
totaling $1.2 million.
Davis told the investigator that he was a
regular patron of a casino in Oklahoma and that he "may have gambled
away" all the money he received from the woman.
Christopher
Buller chose not to testify at his trial in April when a jury found him
guilty of assisting Eric Davis in the bilking of an elderly woman.
Full Article & Source:
Thirty-year sentence meted out in $1.2 million swindle of Nevada woman
I am so sick of the thieves and crooks taking advantage of the elderly.
ReplyDeleteBecause we know elder abuse is rarely prosecuted, I wonder how many crimes of this magnitude go unreported or are not prosecuted.
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