Hannibal Area Man Indicted on Federal
Fraud Charges Connected to His Antique Wood Businesses
St. Louis, Missouri: Scott Rigg was indicted
on mail and wire fraud charges connected to a scheme
to sell antique wood, which he allegedly never delivered,
United States Attorney Catherine L. Hanaway announced
today.
“The indictment alleges that Mr. Rigg caused
seven people to lose $42,305 in deposits and payments
for antique wood that he never delivered,” said
Hanaway.
According to the indictment, between January 2004
and August 2007, Rigg was owner of three businesses,
Coffee Creek Antique Flooring, LLC, Tri State Antique
Flooring, and Midwest Flooring, which advertised and
sold antique wood from Marion County. The indictment
alleges that between January 2006 and August 2007,
Rigg told various individuals that he had antique wood
for sale and demanded deposits before delivery. He
repeatedly promised those customers that their product
was about to be shipped; he sometimes demanded complete
payment before shipment; he sometimes lied about whether
the shipments had actually occurred. Seven people mailed
checks or wired funds to Rigg, expecting delivery of
the antique wood. According the indictment, Rigg did
not deliver the wood.
SCOTT RIGG, Philadelphia, Missouri, was indicted
by a federal grand jury in St. Louis on two felony
counts of wire fraud and five felony counts of mail
fraud.
If convicted, each count of mail and wire fraud carry
a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and/or fines
up to $250,000.
Hanaway commended the work performed on the case by
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and Assistant United
States Attorney Carrie Costantin, who is handling the
case for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
The charges set forth in an indictment are merely
accusations, and each defendant is presumed innocent
until and unless proven guilty.
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