Newport-A U.S. Secret Service special agent on Tuesday, Oct.
27, filed a federal criminal complaint against five residents of Cocke County,
in U.S. District Court in Greeneville.
Four men and one woman were arrested Wednesday, Oct. 28, and
charged with federal charges related to making and distributing counterfeit
money.
Special Agent Douglas M. Allen filed the federal criminal
complaint.
It named as defendants Joie Lee Warden, 36, of 130 Curry
Way, in Del Rio; Charles Wayne Sprouse, 30, of 250 Curry Way, in Del Rio;
Robert A. Webber Jr., 26, of 1242 Evans Valley Road, in Newport; Mark Anthony
Evans, 28, and Misty Lee McMahan, 34, both of 1500 Susong Cemetery Road, in
Newport.
All five were charged with falsely making, forging and
counterfeiting obligations of the United States, uttering and possessing
counterfeit obligations of the United States, dealing in counterfeit
obligations of the United States, and conspiracy to commit offenses against the
United States, according to a press release by Newport Police Chief Maurice
Shults.
Court records indicate that Warden, Sprouse and Webber made
initial appearances before U.S. Magistrate Judge Dennis Inman on Wednesday.
Warden and Sprouse were apparently released on bond pending further court
proceedings.
Judge Inman ordered Webber detained pending trial.
Webber, according to the order of detention, has a "criminal
history" that includes at least two violations of probation, aggravated
assault, resisting arrest, failure to appear, evading arrest, assault on a
government employee, and escape.
Evans, meanwhile, was remanded to the custody of the U.S.
Marshal following an initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Greeneville
on Thursday. Detention and preliminary hearings for Evans were scheduled for
Friday, Nov. 6, at 1:30 p.m.
A Newport Police Department press release issued last week
said, "Over the course of the past several months, at least $5,149 in
counterfeit U.S. currency has been confiscated in Newport as part of an ongoing
investigation into the inundation of the local economy with counterfeit
currency."
It continued, "The bills, ranging from $1 to $100
denominations, have been surfacing in retail businesses, restaurants, motels,
and banks."
Det. Lynn Shults has been the lead investigator for the
cases that began in July, the release stated. He told the Newport Plain Talk on
Friday that more arrests in Cocke County tied to counterfeit bills were
expected soon.
The investigation has lead to the retrieval of forty-two
$100 bills, four $50 bills, twenty-two $20 bills, sixteen $10 bills,
twenty-eight $5 bills, and nine $1 bills inside the city limits of Newport.
Chief Shults was quoted in the release as saying, "I can't
say enough about the cooperation between the Newport Police Department, the
Cocke County Sheriff's Department, and the United States Secret Service."
The release noted that "Detectives Lynn Shults of the
Newport Police Department and Bryan Murr of the Cocke County Sheriff's
Department have been comparing, identifying, and cataloging approximately 500
counterfeit bills that total $16,787."
The federal investigation reportedly began after Agent Allen
of the U.S. Secret Service was notified by Det. Shults on Oct. 22 that on Oct.
16 a Newport man had passed a counterfeit $10 bill at the Mapco convenience
store.
Allen wrote in an affidavit, "In my experience conducting
counterfeit investigations, I have noted that ivory resume paper, color copier
machines, and paper cutters are almost always discovered during the course of a
counterfeit currency investigation where drug users are involved."
He added, "Drug users typically will use counterfeit
currency to either purchase drugs on a small scale or utilize large amounts of
counterfeit currency to 'rip off' other drug dealers. Drug dealers will also
pass counterfeit currency on to local drug dealers as change for larger
denominations given in the purchase of illegal drugs."