Guilty Plea In Hazardous Waste Case

PRESS RELEASE

OXFORD, Miss. Felicia C. Adams, United States Attorney for the Northern District of
Mississippi, together with Andy Castro, Acting Special Agent in Charge of the Environmental
Protection Agency’s criminal enforcement program in the Southeast, announces:
William Michael Manclark, 51, of Newport Beach, California, was sentenced on March
7, 2016, by United States District Judge Neal B. Biggers, Jr., in Oxford, Mississippi, following a
previous guilty plea to one felony count of aiding and abetting others in knowingly making false
material statements in a record or report maintained or used for the purpose of compliance with
regulations set forth by the United States Environmental Protection Agency. At the time of the
offense, Manclark was the Chief Executive Officer and sole shareholder of Leading Edge
Aviation Services, Inc. (Leading Edge), a corporation headquartered in Costa Mesa, California.
Leading Edge operated a commercial aircraft painting facility at Greenville’s Mid-Delta
Regional Airport until mid-2013. Leading Edge has previously entered a guilty plea to one
felony count of treating, storing, or disposing of hazardous waste without a permit at Leading
Edge’s now shuttered Greenville, Mississippi, facility, and was ordered to pay monetary
penalties in the total amount of $1 million.
Manclark was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of five (5) months to be followed by
five (5) months of home confinement. Once his term of incarceration and home confinement is
complete, Manclark will be on supervised release for a period of one (1) year. In addition to the
incarceration, Manclark was ordered to pay a fine of $250,000.00. Manclark was ordered to
report to prison on April 18, 2016.
Felicia C. Adams, United States Attorney, stated: “The United States Attorney’s Office for
the Northern District of Mississippi is working aggressively to pursue those individuals who
commit fraudulent acts and bring them to justice. Today’s sentence insures that those illegal
practices will not be tolerated and fraudsters who knowingly make false material statements will be
punished. Our office appreciates the hard work of the Environmental Protection Agency during this
investigation.”
“Without accurate and honest information, EPA’s mission of protecting human health
and the environment is severely undermined,” said Andy Castro, Acting Special Agent in Charge
of EPA’s criminal enforcement program in Mississippi. “The type of paints and solvents used by
the defendant’s company are especially hazardous, and can put public health at risk if not
handled and disposed of properly. This sentence demonstrates that companies and their senior
managers who knowingly submit false reports will face the consequences in court.”
This case was investigated by the Environmental Protection Agency, Criminal

Categories: Crime, Local News

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