Truck Driving School Owner Sentenced
on Bribery and Fraud Charges
St. Louis , Missouri: Mustafa Redzic,
owner of Bosna Truck Driving School in St. Louis, was
sentenced
to 75 months in prison on multiple charges involving
a bribery/fraud scheme to provide easy tests to hundreds
of students applying for commercial drivers licenses,
United States Attorney Catherine L. Hanaway announced
today.
“Mustafa Redzic seriously compromised the safety
and security of our roads and the integrity of our
Commercial Drivers License testing system during the
few years he was in business,” said U.S. Attorney
Catherine L. Hanaway, who, with Tom Albus, tried the
case for the government. “Today’s sentence
is the result of years of hard work by federal, state,
and local investigators to root out this scheme and,
just as importantly, fix the damage it has done.”
MUSTAFA REDZIC, of St. Louis County, appeared before
United States District Judge E. Richard Webber. Following
his sentence, Redzic was ordered to serve three years
supervised release.
Redzic and his former truck driving school, Bosna
Truck Driving School, which operated at 7719 Hall Street
in St. Louis City, have been under investigation since
2005. The present indictment was handed up nearly one
year ago on June 21, 2007. Redzic’s case went
to trial in April in Cape Girardeau, and the jury found
him guilty on all counts: conspiracy, wire fraud, mail
fraud, and bribery.
At trial, the government presented evidence of a broad
ranging bribery and fraud scheme involving Redzic and
Troy Parr, a commercial drivers license tester who
managed a testing facility in Sikeston, Missouri. Redzic
was found to have bribed Parr in exchange for favorable
treatment of his students at Parr’s testing site.
Parr, who testified at the trial and was sentenced
in April, admitted to accepting numerous cash payments
and the promise of a lucrative job in Redzic’s
organization. In exchange, Parr gave Redzic’s
students “short tests,” which did not meet
state standards. In some cases, Redzic's students did
not even have to show up for testing at all and still
received licenses. In all, the government traced 469
fraudulent commercial drivers licenses to the Redzic-Parr
relationship.
Co-defendant Troy Parr, of Dexter, Missouri, pled
guilty last December and was sentenced to one year
and one day on April 28.
Hanaway commended the work performed on the case by
the task force that included the FBI, U.S. Marshals
Service, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, U.S. Department
of Transportation - Office of the Inspector General;
the State of Missouri Department of Revenue and Highway
Patrol; and Assistant United States Attorney Tom Albus.
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