Lawyer testifies in client's filing

Plan was to say U.S. faked case for revenge, court told

FORT SMITH -- The federal government fabricated its criminal case against James Bolt to get even with him for losing its prosecution against him in a 2007 case, Bolt's attorney testified in federal court Thursday.

Herbert Southern of Fayetteville testified that was the defense Bolt wanted him to prepare in response to the government's 14-count indictment charging him with wire fraud, mail fraud and money laundering.

As part of the fabricated case, Southern said, Bolt had claimed the FBI planted an undercover agent named Leah Cleveland in his business, Situs Cancer Research Center in Rogers. FBI Special Agent Robert Cessario testified Wednesday that he questioned staff members of Situs but no one had ever heard of her.

At one point, Southern said, Bolt asked to be released from jail before his trial so he could search for Leah Cleveland.

Her name appeared on various documents that were used to re-create fraudulent donation agreements Bolt created and submitted in California and Nevada to obtain more than $2.5 million in unclaimed assets. U.S. District Judge Timothy Brooks, who sentenced Bolt to prison in June 2014, said Leah Cleveland was a fictitious person created by Bolt.

In the 2007 case, a federal court jury in Fayetteville acquitted Bolt and three other men of conspiracy and fraud charges in what the government called an investment fraud scheme. The government claimed people were lured to invest in a company called Shimoda-Atlantic that claimed to have developed a drug for cardiovascular disease, eczema and herpes zoster.

Southern said he represented Bolt in the Shimoda-Atlantic case.

Testimony ended Thursday in the two-day hearing before U.S. Magistrate Judge Mark Ford on Bolt's motion to vacate his sentence because of ineffective counsel by Southern and Bolt's appeal attorney Drew Miller of Rogers. Bolt was sentenced to 100 months in prison, was fined $50,000 and ordered to pay more than $2.5 million restitution.

Ford said he will draw up a report and recommendation on Bolt's motion in the next 60 days and pass it on to Brooks, who will make the final decision.

Bolt said in the motion that Southern was a plant for the FBI on his case in that he had worked with Cessario on an earlier investigation that Southern testified had no relation to the charges against Bolt. Southern also had a conflict of interest, Bolt said, because of his relationship with Cessario, who was the lead investigator in the case against Bolt.

Southern testified that he told Bolt about his relationship with Cessario on the day he agreed to represent Bolt.

The motion also claimed that Southern took property belonging to Bolt and Situs. Southern testified that Bolt's mother and girlfriend took the property from Bolt's home and the Situs office and that he received two checks from Bolt totaling $5,200 for his representation of Bolt.

ADVERTISEMENT

More headlines

State Desk on 09/24/2017

Upcoming Events