Home Roanoke woman sentenced for concealing property in bankruptcy proceeding
News

Roanoke woman sentenced for concealing property in bankruptcy proceeding

Contributors
court law
(© Tiko – stock.adobe.com)

A Roanoke woman who failed to disclose her family’s ownership stakes in a series of show ponies as part a bankruptcy proceeding was sentenced today in U.S. District Court.

Laura Wright, 53, was sentenced to six months in federal prison, to be followed by two years of supervised release, six months of which must be spent on home confinement.

Wright had pleaded guilty in October to concealing property in relation to a bankruptcy proceeding.

According to court documents, on Sept. 2, 2014, Wright, and her husband, Stacey Wright, filed a voluntary bankruptcy petition in the United States Bankruptcy Court for the Western District of Virginia in the Roanoke Division.

At the time of the filing, Laura Wright was an attorney with prior bankruptcy experience and a member of the Virginia State Bar.

Prior to filing bankruptcy, and continuing throughout the bankruptcy proceedings, the Wrights incurred substantial expenses associated with the sport of pony jumping, an activity their then-minor child was participating in, and they bought, sold, and maintained ownership interests in several show ponies.

Approximately six weeks before filing bankruptcy, and after retaining bankruptcy counsel and completing a credit counseling course in anticipation of their bankruptcy filing, Laura Wright sold two show ponies for approximately $15,000. In August 2014, Laura Wright and others traveled to Maryland where Laura Wright purchased a show pony for $18,000. Laura Wright later bought and sold additional show ponies while the bankruptcy proceeding was pending.

Although required to do so, the Wrights failed to disclose to the bankruptcy court any ownership interest in or costs associated with show ponies.

In the course of the bankruptcy proceeding, Laura Wright falsely testified under oath concerning her ownership interest in various show ponies, as well as the source of funds used to purchase the $18,000 show pony in August 2014, just prior to the Wrights’ bankruptcy filing.

She further provided a notarized affidavit to the bankruptcy trustee, knowing the affidavit to be materially false.

Support AFP




Contributors

Contributors

Have a guest column, letter to the editor, story idea or a news tip? Email editor Chris Graham at [email protected]. Subscribe to AFP podcasts on Apple PodcastsSpotifyPandora and YouTube.

Latest News

baseball
Baseball

UVA Baseball: Time to start worrying about ‘Hoos after another lackluster showing

george washington baseball
Baseball

North Stafford’s Gregg Ritchie helped mold MLB star Andrew McCutchen

As a hitting coach in the minor leagues with the Pittsburgh Pirates farm system, Gregg Ritchie got to first work in 2005 with future All-Star outfielder Andrew McCutchen.

healthcare
Virginia

Virginia Department of Health reports measles case in Buckingham County

The Virginia Department of Health reported a confirmed case of measles in the state’s Central Region, and said in a press release that it has reason to suspect that measles virus is circulating in the Buckingham County area.

augusta county sheriff accident police crash
Local

Update in Augusta County stabbing case: Victim was only one at the scene

northern virginia
Politics, Virginia

Back to square one: Reset of Virginia’s congressional races post-Scott v. McDougle

uva baseball
Baseball

Series Preview: UVA Baseball hosts Cal in final home weekend of season

washington nationals
Baseball

Series Preview: Washington Nationals battle Miami Marlins for second in the East