NC judge charged with trying to bribe official with ‘couple of cases of beer’
Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones II has been charged with trying to bribe an FBI agent with beer and cash to obtain copies of text messages involving members of his family.
Jones, the senior resident Superior Court judge in a judicial district that includes Wayne, Lenoir and Greene counties, is accused of texting the agent on Oct. 10, trying to get copies of text messages exchanged between two numbers. The FBI can only obtain those records with a warrant approved by a federal magistrate judge on suspicion of criminal activity.
According to the indictment, the judge told the agent the messages were “just for (him)” and “involve(d) family members.”
[[ame="http://media2.newsobserver.com/content/media/2015/11/4/Jones%20Indictment.pdf"]View the indictment of Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones[/ame]]
On Oct. 19, the FBI agent told the judge there wasn’t the legally required probable cause to get the texts, but said he would continue to try if the judge desired.
The indictment outlining the three counts states that the judge said: “I want down low – see what you can do without drawing attention. … This involves family so I don’t want anybody to know.”
[[ame="http://media2.newsobserver.com/content/media/2015/11/4/151104%20Judge%20Jones%20Indictment%20Statement.pdf"]Read a statement from the Department of Justice concerning arrest[/ame]]
The FBI agent and judge met in a car on Oct. 27, according to the indictment, where they discussed a fee for the information. Jones reportedly offered the agent “a couple of cases of beer” for helping him get the information.
On Monday, the federal agent informed the judge he had the information on a disk. In addition to agreeing to shred the disk so it could not be traced back to the agent’s computer, the judge reportedly told the agent he had “his paycheck.”
During that time, the indictment states, the judge agreed to give the agent $100 instead of beer. The two met on Tuesday in Goldsboro, and the judge handed over $100 in cash, according to the indictment.
Jones is accused of promising and paying a bribe to a public official, promising and paying a gratuity to a public official and corruptly attempting to influence an official proceeding.
Read more
Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones II has been charged with trying to bribe an FBI agent with beer and cash to obtain copies of text messages involving members of his family.
Jones, the senior resident Superior Court judge in a judicial district that includes Wayne, Lenoir and Greene counties, is accused of texting the agent on Oct. 10, trying to get copies of text messages exchanged between two numbers. The FBI can only obtain those records with a warrant approved by a federal magistrate judge on suspicion of criminal activity.
According to the indictment, the judge told the agent the messages were “just for (him)” and “involve(d) family members.”
[[ame="http://media2.newsobserver.com/content/media/2015/11/4/Jones%20Indictment.pdf"]View the indictment of Superior Court Judge Arnold Ogden Jones[/ame]]
On Oct. 19, the FBI agent told the judge there wasn’t the legally required probable cause to get the texts, but said he would continue to try if the judge desired.
The indictment outlining the three counts states that the judge said: “I want down low – see what you can do without drawing attention. … This involves family so I don’t want anybody to know.”
[[ame="http://media2.newsobserver.com/content/media/2015/11/4/151104%20Judge%20Jones%20Indictment%20Statement.pdf"]Read a statement from the Department of Justice concerning arrest[/ame]]
The FBI agent and judge met in a car on Oct. 27, according to the indictment, where they discussed a fee for the information. Jones reportedly offered the agent “a couple of cases of beer” for helping him get the information.
On Monday, the federal agent informed the judge he had the information on a disk. In addition to agreeing to shred the disk so it could not be traced back to the agent’s computer, the judge reportedly told the agent he had “his paycheck.”
During that time, the indictment states, the judge agreed to give the agent $100 instead of beer. The two met on Tuesday in Goldsboro, and the judge handed over $100 in cash, according to the indictment.
Jones is accused of promising and paying a bribe to a public official, promising and paying a gratuity to a public official and corruptly attempting to influence an official proceeding.
Read more
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