Longoria will appeal to suspend May 11th incarceration
Robin Renee Herring Longoria, 61, of Ft. Worth, Texas is second from right in white blouse. Source is her son, Austin’s, Twitter dated Nov. 30th, 2016.
Plead guilty and get probation.
Except the deal changed.
When Judge James Gwin took over the Robin Renee Longoria criminal conspiracy child trafficking case on Sept. 15th.
Instead of probation, Robin Renee Longoria, 61, of Ft. Worth, Texas, was sentenced yesterday to one year and one day in a Texas federal prison.
Judge Gwin ordered Robin to:
surrender to U.S. Marshals by May 11
pay restitution of $78,978.70
a prison processing fee of $100
The Judge gave no details as to who Longoria was paying restitution to.
For her role in helping her company buy a four-year-old girl, Madison, from Poland.
The company?
European Adoption Consultants (EAC) in the Cleveland suburb of Strongsville, Ohio.
Robin’s sentencing hearing was yesterday in the Federal District Court in Cleveland, Ohio (OHND).
The Longoria sentencing is in this 19-page court link:
More details are in this sentencing memorandum filed Sunday by Defense Attorney, Steven Jumes of Ft. Worth, Texas.
Jumes (rhymes with gum) will file an appeal as soon as tomorrow.
He will ask that her sentence be suspended until after the case has been decided.
Two years from now.
There are 574 other named defendants in other federal jurisdictions who were part of the EAC criminal child trafficking network.
They got away with $200 million selling up to 8000 children over 41 years and counting.
Details are in this story:
This is a partial list of federal attorneys who tried to hide the secret plea deal from the Judge:
Robert Zink, Chief Fraud Section
Justin E. Herdman, former U.S. Attorney, Ohio N. District Court, Cleveland
Jason K. Manning, Trial Attorneys, Fraud Section
Chelsea S. Rice, Assistant. Attorney. General Cleveland
Alex Kramer, Trial Attorney, Fraud Section
Update
Federal Prosecutors verified that defense attorneys will file an appeal in the Robin Renee Longoria criminal child trafficking case.
They ordered a 14-day transcript of the case.
This means the prosecutors anticipate defense attorneys will file an appeal.
They are preparing the court file to be sent to the Sixth District Court of Appeals in Cincinnati.