The United States Attorney's Office
District of Massachusetts

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Thursday, May 7, 2009
WWW.USDOJ.GOV/USAO/MA
CONTACT: CHRISTINA DiIORIO-STERLING
PHONE: (617)748-3356
E-MAIL: USAMA.MEDIA@USDOJ.GOV

FORMER TRIBAL CHAIRMAN SENTENCED ON CAMPAIGN FINANCE VIOLATIONS AND FRAUD

BOSTON, MA - The former Chairman of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe was sentenced today in U.S. District Court on campaign finance law violations, tax fraud, wire fraud and Social Security fraud, in connection with efforts to secure federal recognition for the Tribe.

Acting United States Attorney Michael K. Loucks; Susan Dukes, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation – Boston Field Office; Warren T. Bamford, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in New England; and Jeff Paula, Special Agent in Charge of the Office of Inspector General, Social Security Administration, Office of Investigations – Boston Field Division, announced today that GLENN A. MARSHALL, age 59, of Mashpee, Massachusetts, was sentenced today by United States District Court Judge Rya Zobel to 41 months imprisonment to be followed by 3 years supervised release and ordered to pay restitution to the Mashpee Wampanoag Indian Tribal Council in the amount of $383,009 and $84,603 to the Social Security Administration. MARSHALL was ordered to self report to the Bureau of Prisons on June 8, 2009.

On February 11, 2009, MARSHALL pled guilty to a making illegal campaign contributions to members of Congress on behalf of the Tribe, embezzling funds from the
Tribe, filing false tax returns for himself and the Tribe and fraudulently receiving Social Security Disability Benefits.

MARSHALL committed these offenses from 2001 to 2007 in connection with his service as Chairman of the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribal Council, the Tribe’s governing body. During his tenure, MARSHALL oversaw the Tribe’s effort to become officially recognized by the federal government, which would qualify the Tribe for an array of federal program benefits, and render it eligible under the Indian Gaming Regulatory Act to build a casino on its lands.

Beginning in 1999, the Tribe’s efforts for recognition was underwritten by a Michiganbased investment company called AtMashpee LLC, which provided the Tribe millions of dollars for its operations and for legal, lobbying and other professional services, in exchange for an equity stake in any casino the Tribe might build. Among other services, the Tribe’s attorneys filed a lawsuit against the Department of the Interior (“DOI”) to force DOI to act on the Tribe’s recognition petition, which the Tribe claimed had been unduly delayed. The Tribe also hired lobbyists to make the Tribe’s case before members of Congress and their staffs in the hope that they would encourage the DOI to act favorably on the petition.

In late-2001, MARSHALL hired a political consultant to coordinate the Tribe's lobbying and public relations activities. The political consultant answered to MARSHALL and worked directly with the Washington-based lobbyists paid for by AtMashpee. By mid-2002, MARSHALL concluded that the lobbyists had failed to build sufficient political pressure in Congress for the Tribe’s petition. In September 2002, after consulting with another officer of the Tribal Council, MARSHALL replaced the lobbyists. He also directed the political consultant to find a Washington, D.C. lobbyist who would be more effective in presenting the Tribe's case for recognition to relevant federal officials, including Members of Congress and officials in the DOI. Consistent with MARSHALL's directive, the political consultant contacted an associate of lobbyist Jack A. Abramoff to determine whether Abramoff would be interested in providing lobbying services on
behalf of the Tribe.

In early-2003, Abramoff and his team of lobbyists began to work for the Tribe and focused their efforts on contacting members of Congress and senior officials in the DOI concerning the status of the Tribe’s recognition petition. In or about January 2003, MARSHALL, along with the political consultant and another officer of the Tribal Council, met with Abramoff and his associates concerning the Tribe's lobbying strategy. Abramoff advised them that in order to advance its recognition effort, the Tribe needed to make significant political contributions to certain Members of Congress so that they might build political pressure on the DOI to act favorably on the Tribe's petition.

Around the same time, the political consultant and certain of the other professionals hired by the Tribal Council told MARSHALL that they preferred to be paid directly by the Tribal Council, rather than by AtMashpee. MARSHALL then arranged to have AtMashpee fund the Tribal Council for the payment of such services, and that such funds would be deposited into an account in the name of the Mashpee Fisherman's Association, a defunct corporation on which MARSHALL and another officer of the Tribal Council were authorized signatories. The account had been dormant for several years.

From 2003 to 2007, AtMashpee paid approximately $4 million into the Fisherman's Account, a sum that MARSHALL willfully omitted to report to the IRS on the Tribal Council’s federal tax returns. MARSHALL used most of the money to pay for legal, lobbying and public relations expenses in connection with the Tribe's recognition effort. The Tribe's lobbyists included Abramoff until in or about 2004, and thereafter, Abramoff's former associates, who lobbied members of Congress and DOI officials concerning the Tribe's petition. They also included lobbyists and a public relations firm in Boston to make the case before state legislators and other state officials that once the Tribe became federally recognized, the state should enter into a compact with the Tribethat would permit it to operate a casino.

In consultation with Abramoff and his team as well as the Boston-based lobbyists, the political consultant recommended on numerous occasions to MARSHALL which state and federal legislators should receive campaign contributions. To finance these contributions, MARSHALL turned to the Tribal Council funds in the Fisherman’s
Association account.

Beginning in or about 2003 and continuing through 2006, MARSHALL used funds in the Fisherman's Association account to make campaign contributions to various elected officials in order to curry favor for the Tribe's recognition petition and its effort to build a casino on tribal land.

MARSHALL was aware that federal law prohibited corporations, including the Tribal Council, from making contributions to federal campaigns. In order to disguise the fact that the Tribal Council was making contributions to federal campaign, MARSHALL solicited various individuals to act as straw contributors, including members of his family and officers of the Tribal Council. In each instance, MARSHALL asked the straw contributor to write a check to a candidate's reelection committee, insisting that the contribution was necessary to further the Tribe's recognition effort and promising the straw contributor that the Tribal Council would reimburse him or her for the contribution. MARSHALL himself also made such straw contributions.

From in or about 2003 to 2007, MARSHALL caused the Tribal Council, through payments from the Fisherman’s Association account, to reimburse thirty-four straw
contribution totaling $49,950.00 to federal campaigns, and another twenty-five straw contributions totaling $10,550.00 to elected state officials. MARSHALL paid all of the reimbursements by check or cash drawn from the Tribal Council funds in the Fisherman's Association account.

During the same period, MARSHALL used funds in the Fisherman’s Association account for personal expenses, knowing that the funds belonged to the Tribal Council. Specifically, MARSHALL spent approximately $380,000 from the Fisherman's Association account on such personal expenses as groceries, vacation trips, tuition payments for his daughter, dining, home repairs, home mortgage payments and jewelry. MARSHALL willfully failed to report not only these expenses as personal income on his tax returns, but his $44,000 salary from the Tribal Council as well.

In addition, MARSHALL had received disability benefit payments since the late 1980's based on his representations to the Social Security Administration that he was unable to work as a result of a disability. In 2000, MARSHALL began working full-time for the Tribal Council as Chairman, yet he refrained from disclosing his employment status to the Social Security Administration, knowing that it would have rendered himself ineligible to receive further benefits. He thereafter collected approximately $10,000 a year in benefits to which he was not entitled.

The case was investigated by the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation, the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Office of Inspector General of the Social Security Administration. It was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Jonathan Mitchell of Louks’ Economic Crimes Unit.