Source: FBI
In a case that exposed widespread
corruption in a South Texas county’s judicial system—reaching all the
way to the district attorney’s office—a former state judge was recently
sentenced to six years in prison for taking bribes and kickbacks in
return for favorable rulings from his bench.
Abel Limas, 59, a lifelong
resident of Brownsville, Texas, served as a police officer and practiced
law before becoming a state judge in Cameron County in 2001. He served
eight years on the bench, during which time he turned his courtroom into
a criminal enterprise to line his own pockets.
“The depth of the corruption was
shocking,” said Mark Gripka, a special agent in our San Antonio Division
who was part of the team that investigated the case. “What was more
shocking was how cheaply Judge Limas sold his courtroom—$300 here, $500
there—in return for a favorable ruling.”
There was plenty of big money involved as
well. Limas received more than $250,000 in bribes and kickbacks while he
was on the bench. He took money from attorneys with civil cases pending
in his court in return for favorable pre-trial rulings, most notably in
a case involving a Texas helicopter crash that was later settled for
$14 million. Referring to an $8,000 payment Limas received in that case,
our investigators listened on the telephone as he described the cash to
an accomplice as eight golf balls. “Their code language didn’t fool
anybody,” Gripka said.
Evidence also showed that Limas made a
deal with the attorneys in the helicopter crash case to become an “of
counsel” attorney with the firm. He was promised an advance of $100,000
and 10 percent of the settlement—all while the case was still pending in
his court.
Abel Limas describes plot to accomplice. Transcript
Over a 14-month period beginning in
November 2007, investigators used court-authorized wiretaps to listen to
the judge’s phone calls. “That’s when we really learned the scope of
what he was doing,” Gripka explained. The judge’s nearly $100,000 annual
salary was not enough to support his lifestyle, which included regular
gambling trips to Las Vegas.
In 2010, when Limas was faced with the
overwhelming evidence against him, he began to cooperate in a wider
public corruption investigation—and our agents learned that the Cameron
County district attorney at the time, Armando Villalobos, was also
corrupt. The investigation showed, among other criminal activities, that
Villalobos accepted $80,000 in cash in exchange for taking actions that
allowed a convicted murderer to be released for 60 days without bond
prior to reporting to prison. The murderer failed to report to prison
and remains a fugitive.
Limas pled guilty to racketeering
in 2011. By that time, he had helped authorities uncover wide-ranging
corruption in the Cameron County judicial system. To date, 10
other defendants have been convicted by a jury or pled guilty as part of
the FBI’s six-year investigation, including a former Texas state
representative, three attorneys, a former investigator for the district
attorney’s office, and Villalobos, who is scheduled to be sentenced next
month on racketeering, extortion, and bribery charges.
“During the course of this investigation,
we interviewed over 800 people, including many local attorneys in
Cameron County,” Gripka said. “We hope this case shows everyone that the
government will not tolerate officials who violate the public trust.
Fighting public corruption is a priority for the FBI,” he added, “and it
is something we take very seriously.”