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Exclusive: Cromwell, co-defendants sentenced to 20-50 years for fraudulent liens

Posted at 2:38 pm June 30, 2018
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Oak Ridge resident Lee Harold Cromwell, 68, was sentenced to 25 years in prison on 28 counts of forgery and filling fraudulent liens during a hearing in Nashville criminal court on Wednesday, June 27, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

Oak Ridge resident Lee Harold Cromwell, 68, was sentenced to 25 years in prison on 28 counts of forgery and filling fraudulent liens during a criminal court hearing in Nashville on Wednesday, June 27, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Oak Ridge resident Lee Harold Cromwell, 68, was sentenced to 25 years in prison on 28 counts of forgery and filling fraudulent liens during a hearing in criminal court in Nashville on Wednesday, June 27, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

Oak Ridge resident Lee Harold Cromwell, 68, was sentenced on 28 counts of forgery and filling fraudulent liens during a criminal court hearing in Nashville on Wednesday, June 27, 2018. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

NASHVILLE—Five East Tennessee men who have been identified as “sovereign citizens,” including one from Oak Ridge and another from Clinton, were sentenced to 20-50 years in prison on Wednesday after filing fraudulent liens worth hundreds of millions of dollars against public officials, law enforcement officers, and others.

The five defendants—who included Austin Gary Cooper, 69, of Clinton, and Lee Harold Cromwell, 68, of Oak Ridge—had earlier been convicted of more than 200 counts of forgery and filing unlawful liens. That was at the end of a six-day trial in Davidson County Criminal Court in Nashville in late April.

Their sentencing hearing was Wednesday. It lasted more than three hours.

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Filed Under: Anderson County, Courts, Courts, Davidson County, For Members, Front Page News, Nashville, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Premium Content, Slider, Tennessee Tagged With: 20th Judicial District, A. A. Birch Criminal Justice Building, Anderson County Criminal Court, Austin Gary Cooper, Cheryl Blackburn, Christopher Alan Hauser, Dave Clark, Davidson County Criminal Court, Don Elledge, Elaine Cuthbertson, Federal Bureau of Investigation Joint Terrorism Task Force, filing fraudulent liens, forgery, forgery of more than $250000, fraudulent liens, Heather Brackett, James Michael Usinger, James Robinson, Jared Mollenkof, Lee Harold Cromwell, Lesli Oliver Wright, Mark Irwin, Midtown Community Center, Nashville public defender's office, Pamela Auble, paper terrorism, Roger Moore, Ronald James Lyons, Sarah King, sentencing hearing, Seventh Judicial District Attorney General, sovereign citizen, sovereign citizen ideology, sovereign citizens, TBI, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Tony Thompson, unlawful liens, vehicular homicide, Wendy Hamil

Defense asks for three-year suspended sentence for Cromwell

Posted at 12:12 pm June 17, 2017
By John Huotari 2 Comments

Lee Harold Cromwell, 68, of Oak Ridge, has been charged with vehicular homicide and eight counts of aggravated assault in a fatal parking lot crash at the Midtown Community Center in Oak Ridge after fireworks on July 4, 2015. Cromwell has been on trial in Anderson County Criminal Court in Clinton, starting Monday, Feb. 13, 2017, and continuing through Wednesday, Feb. 15. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

Prosecutors have asked for an 11-year sentence for Lee Harold Cromwell, 67, of Oak Ridge, for his one vehicular homicide conviction and eight aggravated assault convictions in a fatal parking lot crash at the Midtown Community Center in Oak Ridge after fireworks on July 4, 2015. His defense attorney has asked for a three-year suspended sentence. Cromwell is pictured above during a three-day trial from Feb. 13-15, 2017, in Anderson County Criminal Court in Clinton. He has a sentencing hearing scheduled for Monday, June 19. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was updated at 5:20 p.m.

CLINTON—A public defender has asked for a three-year suspended sentence for Lee Cromwell, the Oak Ridge man convicted of one count of vehicular homicide and eight counts of aggravated assault in the fatal parking lot crash at Midtown Community Center after fireworks on July 4, 2015.

The three-year suspended sentence would be much less than what prosecutors have requested, an effective 11-year sentence.

Cromwell, 67, has a sentencing hearing scheduled with Senior Judge Paul Summers in Anderson County Criminal Court in Clinton at 1 p.m. Monday, June 19.

The July 4 fireworks crash killed James Robinson of Knoxville, a 37-year-old husband and father who was trying to push his two daughters to safety. The crash injured eight others. It’s one of the worst crashes anyone can remember in Oak Ridge.

Cromwell was convicted of the vehicular homicide and aggravated assault charges after a three-day trial in Anderson County Criminal Court in Clinton in February. His initial sentencing hearing was postponed because Cromwell did not want private attorney James Scott representing him anymore. Anderson County Public Defender Tom Marshall has been appointed instead. Scott had previously filed a motion to withdraw from the case and then renewed it during an April 11 hearing, citing irreconcilable differences with Cromwell, according to court records.

In April, Deputy District Attorney General Anthony J. Craighead of the Seventh Judicial District in Anderson County asked for the effective 11-year sentence to be served in a state prison. Craighead asked for that sentence in a notice of enhancement factors that was filed in Anderson County Criminal Court. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Police and Fire, Slider Tagged With: aggravated assault, Anderson County, Anderson County Criminal Court, Anthony J. Craighead, fatal parking lot crash, fraudulent liens, James Robinson, James Scott, Lee Cromwell, Midtown Community Center, notice of enhancement factors, parking lot crash, Paul Summers, sentencing hearing, sentencing memorandum, Seventh Judicial District, sovereign citizen, Tom Marshall, vehicular homicide

Cromwell files $137 million in liens against law enforcement, IRS, Social Security

Posted at 4:37 pm February 15, 2017
By John Huotari 5 Comments

Lee-Cromwell-Preliminary-Hearing-Jan-15-2016

Lee H. Cromwell, the Oak Ridge man convicted of vehicular homicide and aggravated assault on Wednesday, Feb. 15, 2017, has filed $137 million in liens against local law enforcement officials and agencies, as well as against the Internal Revenue Service and a Social Security service center, according to state records. Cromwell, who was convicted after a fatal parking lot crash at the Midtown Community Center after fireworks in Oak Ridge on July 4, 2015, is pictured above during a preliminary hearing in Anderson County General Sessions Court on Friday, Jan. 15, 2016. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 12:15 p.m. Feb. 17.

Lee Harold Cromwell, the Oak Ridge man convicted of vehicular homicide and aggravated assault on Wednesday, has filed $137 million in liens against local law enforcement officials and agencies, as well as against the Internal Revenue Service and a Social Security service center, according to state records.

Cromwell has been indicted by a grand jury in Davidson County in Nashville on Class A and Class E felonies. Officials announced those indictments after Cromwell was convicted at the end of his vehicular homicide trial in Anderson County Criminal Court in Clinton on Wednesday.

On Thursday, the Tennessee Bureau of Investigation elaborated, saying that Cromwell was one of 11 people indicted in a 320-count indictment after a one-year investigation into fraudulent liens in East Tennessee that was conducted with help from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. So far, 10 of the 11 people have been arrested on charges of unlawfully filing liens and making false entries into records, the TBI said. Multiple other state, county, and local law enforcement agencies participated in the arrests on Wednesday.

Seven of those arrested, or more than half of them, are from Anderson County. They claim to be “sovereign citizens,” or people who do not typically “believe that they have to abide by the rules everyone else follows because they have declared their personal independence from government,” said Dave Clark, Anderson County district attorney general.

TBI special agents began their investigation at the request of Clark in May 2016. They were helped by the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Anderson County, Federal, Front Page News, Government, Government, Oak Ridge, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: Adam Ghassemi, aggravated assault, Dave Clark, Don Elledge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, fraudulent liens, fraudulently filed liens, Internal Revenue Service, IRS, James Scott, Lee Cromwell, Lee H. Cromwell, Leslie Earhart, liens, Midtown Community Center, parking lot crash, Paul Summers, Social Security, sovereign citizen, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation, Tennessee Secretary of State, Tony Craighead, Tre Hargett, vehicular homicide, Vickie Bannach

DA’s office also recused from July 4 fatal crash case because of liens filed by defendant

Posted at 9:05 pm July 26, 2016
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Anderson County Criminal Court Lee Cromwell Jim Scott July 25 2016

Lee Cromwell, right, who has been charged with vehicular homicide and 16 other charges after a fatal parking lot crash at Midtown Community Center after fireworks on July 4, 2015, huddles with his family and defense attorney James Scott, left, after an arraignment in Anderson County Criminal Court in Clinton on Monday, July 25, 2016. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was updated at 11:47 a.m. July 27.

CLINTON—First the judge recused himself and now the district attorney general’s office has been recused in a homicide case filed against an Oak Ridge man after a fatal crash in the crowded parking lot of Midtown Community Center after fireworks on July 4, 2015.

Both recusals were because of liens filed by the defendant, Lee Harold Cromwell, 66. The recusals mean another judge has already been appointed, and another DA will have to be appointed. A lien is a claim that one person owes something to another person.

Anderson County Criminal Court Judge Donald R. Elledge recused himself during a June 3 arraignment because of an $8 million lien filed against him by Cromwell.

“It was upsetting that he filed a frivolous lien against me,” Elledge said Monday. “I’m going to do everything I can legally, morally, and ethically to prosecute him criminally and civilly to the full extent of the law.”

Then, during a rescheduled arraignment on Monday, defense attorney James K. Scott asked for Anderson County District Attorney General Dave Clark and the DA’s office to also be recused. That was because of liens that Cromwell filed against the DA and another member of his office in “misplaced mindset” in a “misguided effort, out of desperation, to advocate for his innocence without the knowledge or advice of counsel,” Scott said in a motion to recuse. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Front Page News, Oak Ridge, Police and Fire, Top Stories Tagged With: Adam Ghassemi, Anderson County Circuit and Criminal Court, Anderson County Criminal Court, Anderson County DA, Anderson County District Attorney General, arraignment, Ben Higgins, Curtis Booker, Dave Clark, Donald R. Elledge, Elizabeth Eldridge, fraudulent lien, homicide, indictments, Ja’Shalin Porter, Ja’Taalia Henderson, Jackie Robinson, Jaide Robinson, James K. Scott, James Robinson, Jim Akagi, Julia Robinson, La’Ruis Henderson, Le’Meire Porter, Lee Cromwell, Lee Harold Cromwell, Michael Eldridge, Michele Wojciechowski, Midtown Community Center, Mortisia Corey, Oak Ridge Police Department, parking lot crash, Paul G. Summers, sovereign citizen, Tennessee Administrative Office of the Courts, Tennessee Secretary of State, Tim Shelton, Tony Craighead, Vickie Bannach, William Jones

Bond reduced for Cromwell, driver in fatal parking lot crash

Posted at 4:38 pm July 28, 2015
By John Huotari Leave a Comment

Derek Setzer and Lee Cromwell

Lee Cromwell, 65, of Oak Ridge, right, is escorted through Anderson County General Sessions Court on Tuesday by Anderson County Sheriff’s Department Deputy Derek Setzer. Cromwell has been charged with homicide and aggravated assault, among other charges, after a fatal parking lot crash after July 4 fireworks in Oak Ridge. (Photo by John Huotari/Oak Ridge Today)

 

Note: This story was last updated at 10:30 a.m. July 30.

Bond was reduced to $100,000 on Tuesday for an Oak Ridge man accused of killing one person and injuring 11 people in a parking lot crash after July 4 fireworks.

There were concerns about whether Lee Cromwell, 65, considers himself a “sovereign citizen” and denies governmental authority, and Anderson County General Sessions Court Judge Roger Miller reported that Cromwell was somewhat defiant at his arraignment.

Still, Miller lowered bond for Cromwell from about $205,500 to $100,000, more than cutting it in half.

Cromwell was released Tuesday evening. He is prohibited from contacting the victims. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Anderson County, Government, Oak Ridge, Police, Police and Fire, Slider, Top Stories Tagged With: aggravated assault, Anderson County General Sessions Court, Ben Higgins, Bond, bond hearing, fireworks, homicide, James Robinson, James Scott, July 4, Lee Cromwell, Mary Frances Cromwell, Michael Eldridge, Midtown Community Center, Oak Ridge City Court, Oak Ridge Police Department, parking lot crash, Roger Miller, sovereign citizen, Vickie Bannach

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