By Derek Spellman
dspellman@joplinglobe.com
Sentencing has been delayed pending a mental evaluation of a rural Seneca man who bilked an elderly Joplin woman out of more than $16,000 last year.
Marty Rickey, 34, originally was scheduled to be sentenced Friday in Jasper County Circuit Court on three counts of financial exploitation of the elderly. He had pleaded guilty to those charges in June.
But Rickey’s defense attorney, public defender Darren Wallace, said Rickey has suffered repeated seizures that at times required hospitalization since the guilty plea earlier this summer.
Rickey is now on medication, Wallace said, and asked that Rickey undergo a mental evaluation and temporary hospitalization to determine Rickey’s mental fitness before proceeding with sentencing. Wallace did say he did not think Rickey’s seizures affected his previous guilty plea, since they occurred sometime afterward.
Assistant Jasper County Prosecutor John Nicholas said he could find no law to preclude the examination.
Circuit Judge David Mouton then granted Wallace’s motion for the evaluation. A new sentencing date has not been set.
Rickey has faced a number of charges in multiple counties over the past year.
In August, Rickey was sentenced to a pair of 10-year prison sentences, to be served concurrently, for charges of first-degree burglary and financial exploitation of an elderly person in Newton County.
In December, Ricky attempted to swindle an 85-year-old south Joplin woman by demanding that she pay him $2,120 for roof repairs that he had not performed. That incident triggered the charge of financial exploitation. In January, Rickey broke into a rural Newton County home while its 72-year-old occupant was there. Rickey had falsely claimed to be with a Joplin company and had tried to get the man to pay for repairs to his roof that had not been done.
In Jasper County, Rickey was arrested after he bilked a 76-year-old Joplin woman out of $16,428. He and a co-defendant, Jeramie W. Furnas, on Dec. 17, 2008, asked the woman for payment in advance to repair holes in the siding of the woman’s house and put a sealant on her roof. The woman wrote checks for $6,628 and $4,800 to Rickey and made out checks to the co-defendant, for $3,900, according to court records.
Rickey returned a week later telling the victim he had trouble cashing her checks and convinced her to write another check for $1,100.
The pair didn’t make any repairs.
Rickey also admitted to taking $163 from an 85-year-old man after offering to repair loose shingles while representing himself as being with an insurance company. That incident happened Jan. 5, 2009.
In a separate case, Rickey pleaded guilty to felony fraudulent use of a credit device, admitting to spending $1,382 on a credit card at Wal-Mart on Dec. 24, 2008, without the owner’s permission.
Rickey is also charged in Cherokee County, Kan., with felony kidnapping, felony aggravated robbery, felony aggravated burglary and misdemeanor theft related to a November 2007 incident in rural Baxter Springs
Local News
Rickey to undergo mental evaluation after bilking elederly woman of more than $16,000
- Local News
-
-
Board places $62 million bond issue on April ballot
In a special session Monday morning, the Joplin Board of Education unanimously approved for the ballot what likely is the largest bond issue proposal in the history of the school district.
-
Turnout could be low for ‘straw poll’ primary
Local election officials don’t know what to expect in terms of voter turnout for today’s presidential preference primary, several said Monday.
-
Council denies Highview rezoning
Current residents of Highview Avenue, south of 20th Street, won a battle Monday night when the Joplin City Council denied commercial zoning for residential lots on the east side of the street. The war may not be over, though.
-
Two men plead guilty in sex-offense cases
The Jasper County prosecutor’s office obtained convictions Monday in two sex-offense cases through offers for the defendants to enter pleas on reduced charges.
-
Judge sends identity thief to prison
The husband of a woman who was sent to prison last year for putting an imaginary baby up for sale on Craigslist was assessed a prison term himself Monday for trafficking in stolen identities.
-
Carl Junction panel studying dog tethering, barking issues
The Carl Junction Codes and Nuisance Review Committee will meet today to consider possible ordinances for dog retention after a complaint by a resident at the most recent City Council meeting.
-
PSU president gives faculty preview of legislative report
At a forum Monday afternoon on budget-related and legislative issues, Pittsburg State University President Steve Scott gave about 100 faculty and staff members a preview of today’s testimony before the House Education Budget Committee.
-
No objections voiced to tribe’s CID proposal
A couple of questions but no objections were voiced Monday at a public hearing regarding a proposed community improvement district in northwest Newton County.
-
Mike Pound: Grown men soon to be playing baseball, so all is well
Now that the Super Bowl is over (It is over, isn’t it?), I’ve set my sights on Feb. 18. That is the day, according to what I’ve read, when major league baseball pitchers and catchers are due to start reporting for spring training. When spring training is under way, I don’t care what the weather is like around here.
-
SW Mo. man charged with abusing foster kids
A southwest Missouri man has been charged with sexually abusing two of his foster children.
- More Local News Headlines
-






