So here's where some of that money ended up. (Halliburton and its cohorts
didn't get it all!)

AP describes Warr as "a first-term Republican mayor and wealthy 
businessman" 
(http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090128/ap_on_re_us/katrina_fraud_mayor).

MCM

WARR, WIFE CHARGED
WITH KATRINA FRAUD
By ANITA LEE


http://www.sunherald.com/pageone/v-print/story/1101092.html



GULFPORT - A Hurricane Katrina-recovery ambassador to President 
George W. Bush and the nation, Mayor Brent Warr says his work and the 
city's will continue as prosecutors prepare a federal case against 
him and his wife, Laura, on 16 charges of Katrina fraud.

The Warrs cried quietly Wednesday in the corridor of the U.S. 
District courthouse just blocks from City Hall after they were each 
indicted on 16 charges: one count of conspiracy, one count of fraud, 
two counts of theft of public funds, four counts of making false 
statements, three counts of wire fraud and five counts of mail fraud.

The indictment says the Warrs reconstructed their beachfront mansion 
with $222,798 in ill-gotten gains from FEMA, HUD and Lexington 
Insurance Co. from September 2005 to March 2007. The Warrs received 
the maximum $150,000 HUD homeowners grant through the Mississippi 
Development Authority, $9,558 in FEMA funds and $88,440.10 from 
Lexington Insurance Co., the indictment says.

Prosecutors contend they were not entitled to the federal money 
because they had not moved into the beachfront home before the Aug. 
29, 2005, hurricane. The government also says they misrepresented 
their losses to Lexington.
The Warrs, their hands clasped in front of them, pleaded innocent to 
the charges before U.S. Magistrate Judge John M. Roper.

Gulfport's first couple potentially faces maximum penalties of 210 
years each in prison and fines of up to $4 million each. The 
government also is seeking forfeiture of their Katrina recovery and 
insurance funds, or assets of equal value.

Outside the courthouse, Warr, 45, said: "Laura and I have entered our 
plea. It speaks for itself. We are not going to make public comments 
about this case.
We are going to keep our comments in the courtroom where they belong.

"The main thing that's most important right now, and I just want to 
say, is that I'm going to take care of and protect my family." Brent 
and Laura Warr, 43, have two children.

Their trial is tentatively scheduled for April 6. Their attorney, Joe 
Sam Owen of Gulfport, told the judge that the Warrs would have 
separate attorneys by Monday. There is a potential conflict of 
interest when a couple is represented by the same attorney. The judge 
pointed out that a plea might be offered to one defendant with less 
involvement, which an attorney representing both of them could not 
negotiate.

Owen said after the hearing that the indictment has no relation to 
Warr's job as mayor, which he will continue to perform as the 
municipal election season approaches. Warr said later in the day that 
he still plans to seek re-election.
However, the mayor and his wife will need permission from their court 
probation officer to travel outside Mississippi's Southern District. 
The Southern District covers from Jackson to the Coast.

The judge approved an out-of-state trip the mayor has scheduled for 
city business from Feb. 15-17.

The U.S. Attorney's Office, which refused to verify the existence of 
the indictment sealed since Jan. 22, issued a statement after the 
hearing. It read much like the statements released after other 
Katrina fraud indictments. The federal court has 57 such criminal 
cases pending.

Warr previously has acknowledged that, when Katrina struck, his 
family was living in his deceased grandmother's house on Woodglen 
Drive to avoid construction dust and noise at the beach house. Warr 
said he spent most of his time at the beach house, where his family 
joined him nights and weekends while he worked on renovations.

"Most of our clothing, children's toys and our larger furnishings 
were either in our (beach) home or in storage waiting to be moved 
there," Warr wrote in an open letter the Sun Herald published when 
the federal investigation started. "At the time of the storm, the 
inside of our home was complete and we had furniture and personal 
possessions in the house. This home was my primary residence."

He said that he and his wife applied for a homeowner's grant just 
like any other residents and did not know the person who took their 
application. He also requested that the Mississippi Development 
Authority, which administered the federal grant funds, review his 
file for any improprieties.

"Prior to Hurricane Katrina," he wrote, "I occupied this home with my 
body, my financial commitment and sacrifice, time, energy, attention, 
family, hopes, and dreams.

"Like thousands of other storm victims, my financial ability to 
recover from the damage and rebuild the house has been made possible 
by the homeowners grant. If we had not received this grant, I feel 
certain the house would still be boarded up and in the state that it 
was left in on August 29, 2005."
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