Crime & Safety
Bribery Convictions Affirmed For Balch Lawyer, Drummond Executive
A U.S. Appellate Court affirmed the convictions of a Birmingham lawyer and a Drummond executive in a scheme to bribe a state legislator.
BIRMINGHAM, AL — The U.S. Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit Thursday affirmed the convictions of a Birmingham lawyer and an Alabama coal company executive in a scheme to bribe a state legislator to use his office to oppose Environmental Protection Agency actions in north Birmingham.
A jury found former Balch & Bingham partner Joel Iverson Gilbert and former Drummond Company vice president of Government and Regulatory Affairs David Lynn Roberson guilty of bribery, honest services wire fraud, conspiracy and money laundering.
At trial, the government showed that, after the EPA notified a Drummond Company subsidiary of its potential liability for cleanup costs, Gilbert and Roberson bribed former Alabama Rep. Oliver Robinson (D-Birmingham) to advocate Drummond’s opposition to EPA’s prioritization or expansion of the north Birmingham Superfund site near Robinson’s district.
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The bribe came in the form of a consulting contract that paid Robinson $360,000 through the Oliver Robinson Foundation, a non-profit organization, between 2015 and 2016. In return, Robinson spoke to EPA officials and state environmental officials, secretly taping his meetings, and cast a vote for a state resolution drafted by Gilbert opposing the EPA’s efforts.
On appeal, Gilbert and Roberson contended that their actions did not meet the legal definition of bribery. The Eleventh Circuit disagreed and affirmed their judgments of conviction. It held that the two “concealed payments of hundreds of thousands of dollars to an Alabama Representative through his charitable foundation” in exchange for his official acts “intended to undermine the Environmental Protection Agency’s...efforts to clean up a Superfund site.”
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“The Eleventh Circuit confirmed what the jury understood. Joel Gilbert and David Roberson paid a state representative to deprive the voters of north Birmingham of their voice,” U.S. Attormey Prim Escalona said. “The appellate court’s decision makes clear that the very purpose of our bribery laws is to prohibit such efforts to subvert the will of the community.”
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