NEWS FEED

Divorces ASKED

20 hours ago

Marriages (Tulsans unless indicated)

20 hours ago

Gunman in Navy Yard rampage was hearing voices He had been treated since August by Veterans Affairs, the officials said.

12 hours ago

Former Tulsan Jimmy Morrisett sentenced to nine years for defrauding oil investors

By DAVID HARPER World Staff Writer on Sep 13, 2013, at 2:28 AM  Updated on 9/17/13 at 9:40 AM


Jimmy E. Morrisett: A grand jury alleged in the indictment that while his oil and gas ventures earned some income, he operated them as a Ponzi-type scheme, where the majority of the money came from new investors. A prosecutor said it became apparent during the investigation that Morrisett could "sell refrigerators to Eskimos."


Local

City refunding QuikTrip's unsold green-waste stickers

The convenience store chain was the sole distributor of the 50-cent stickers residents were required to place on bags of extra yard waste.

Pushups for Tulsa police officer didn't violate man's civil rights, jury says

The plaintiff alleged in a lawsuit that he was made to perform pushups to avoid a ticket or jail.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

David Harper

918-581-8359
Email

A former Tulsan was sentenced Thursday to nine years in prison and was ordered to pay nearly $7 million in restitution for defrauding investors in oil and gas ventures.

U.S. Chief District Judge Gregory Frizzell said Jimmy E. Morrisett, 54, lived a lavish lifestyle without regard to the hardships suffered by his victims, many of whom were elderly.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin Leitch told the court that 238 people were victims of the fraud.

"Two hundred and thirty-eight households have been devastated by this man," Leitch said.

Morrisett was charged with wire fraud, mail fraud and money laundering in a 182-count indictment that was filed under seal in December 2011.

A grand jury alleged in the indictment that while Morrisett's oil and gas ventures earned some income, he operated them as a Ponzi-type scheme, where the majority of the money came from new investors.

Ongoing operations - including payments to investors - were sustained only through the recruitment of new investment dollars, the indictment says.

Morrisett was accused of luring potential investors and lulling actual investors through financial reports that contained false representations.

Payments were made to investors from March 2005 until January 2007 under the false pretense that the money came from oil and gas ventures.

Morrisett pleaded guilty March 27 to only one charge that the U.S. Attorney's Office in Tulsa had filed the previous day involving an unlawful transaction that Morrisett made in December 2006.

However, Frizzell was able to consider all relevant conduct in determining a sentence and ordered Morrisett to pay $6,874,135.44 in restitution to the victims, who are residents of 38 states - including Oklahoma - as well as the District of Columbia and Canada.

Morrisett, who is free on bond and living in Burnet, Texas, must report to prison by Oct. 23.

The defendant apologized to the victims Thursday, but Leitch told the judge that while Morrisett was engaging in criminal conduct he showed only "greed and indifference" to those around him.

Leitch said it became apparent during his office's investigation that Morrisett could "sell refrigerators to Eskimos."


David Harper 918-581-8359
david.harper@tulsaworld.com
Original Print Headline: Man is sentenced for defrauding oil and gas investors
Local

City refunding QuikTrip's unsold green-waste stickers

The convenience store chain was the sole distributor of the 50-cent stickers residents were required to place on bags of extra yard waste.

Pushups for Tulsa police officer didn't violate man's civil rights, jury says

The plaintiff alleged in a lawsuit that he was made to perform pushups to avoid a ticket or jail.

CONTACT THE REPORTER

David Harper

918-581-8359
Email

COMMENTS

Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories. You can either sign in to your Tulsa World account or use Facebook.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free. To comment through Facebook, please sign in to your account before you comment.

Read our commenting policy.


Join the conversation.

Anyone can post a comment on Tulsa World stories.

Sign in to your online account. If you don't have an account, create one for free.

Read our commenting policy.

By clicking "Submit" you are agreeing to our terms and conditions, and grant Tulsa World the right and license to publish the content of your posted comment, in whole or in part, in Tulsa World.