—
The former owner of Ozark Memorial Park Cemetery in Joplin was sentenced Wednesday in federal court for failing to pay more than $1.1 million in payroll taxes that were deducted from his employees’ wages.
Gregory E. Crocker, 44, of Joplin, was sentenced to two years and six months in federal prison without parole. The court also ordered Crocker to pay restitution of $1,586,024. The amount includes the more than $1.1 million that Crocker failed to pay the Internal Revenue Service, plus interest.
On Nov. 8, 2011, Crocker pleaded guilty to failing to account for and pay over to the IRS money that was deducted from employees’ paychecks for federal income taxes, and Social Security and Medicare taxes. Crocker admitted that for an eight-year period ending in March 2010, he willfully failed to pay payroll taxes to the IRS and to file employer’s federal quarterly income tax returns.
U.S. District Judge Gary A. Fenner handed down the sentence in federal court in Springfield. The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Mohlhenrich.
Crocker was an owner and the executive officer of Ozark Memorial Park Cemetery, a cemetery and marketer of pre-need funeral services.
The cemetery in 2010 was among properties to be offered in the county tax sale because two years of property taxes totaling $28,000 had not been paid.
The operation also had been placed on probation by the Missouri Office of Endowed Care Cemeteries, a regulatory agency that oversees cemeteries with perpetual care funds. The state required the cemetery to pay $33,447 into its endowed care trust fund. The amount represented what should have been paid into the fund from 2004 through 2006.
The cemetery on North St. Louis Avenue had been in the Crocker family for years. It now is owned by Donna and Gary Hall, who bought the operation in late 2010.
Complaints
BEFORE THE CEMETERY CHANGED HANDS, the operation had been the source of complaints from people who said grave markers or other services for which they had paid were not being delivered.
Top Stories
Former Joplin cemetery owner sentenced to federal prison
- Top Stories
-
-
Ceremony to mark push for Civil War memorial
Organizers hope that today’s ceremony marking the 150th anniversary of a Civil War battle northwest of Joplin also will encourage support to finance a permanent memorial on the site.
-
Hatred, resentment and retribution fueled bloody encounter at Rader’s Farm
Members of the 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry regiment had been in Jasper County in large numbers on previous foraging missions. Coming from their outpost in modern-day Baxter Springs, Kan., the armed former slaves in Union uniforms had entered the property and homes of white residents to take their food or other useful supplies.
-
Disaster response team to hold tornado memorial ride
A group of motorcycle enthusiasts who focus on disaster relief plan to hold a motorcycle ride through Joplin on the second anniversary of the May 22, 2011, tornado.
-
Weather delays opening of Schifferdecker water park
Wet spring weather has delayed work on the Schifferdecker Aquatic Center, and it will not open over Memorial Day weekend, city officials said today.
-
Interfaith service set for Sunday in Landreth Park
Different Faiths - One Community is the theme of an interfaith services at 2:30 p.m. Sunday in Landreth Park.
-
St. Mary’s breaks ground to replace structures destroyed in 2011 tornado
Ground was broken symbolically Thursday to mark the beginning of a new chapter in the life of St. Mary’s parish in Joplin. “Our life is full of many chapters, and so is our parish,’’ said Bishop James Johnston, with the Roman Catholic Diocese of Springfield-Cape Girardeau.
-
Identity-theft victim jailed on culprit’s warrant
Kurt Millard spent most of last weekend in the Jasper County Jail, locked up on another man’s arrest warrant. The 26-year-old Joplin resident could not convince his jailers they had the wrong guy. “I got the run-around the whole weekend,” Millard told the Globe. “I didn’t even get to wish my mother a happy Mother’s Day.”
-
Attorney general files suit against California contractor
Attorney General Chris Koster on Thursday filed a lawsuit against a California man, alleging he failed to provide construction materials and home repair services that had been paid for by victims of the Joplin tornado.
-
Organizers ambitious in goals for this year’s Heart Walk
Organizers of the Four-State Heart Walk, to be held in September in Joplin, are ambitious: Last year’s event raised about $27,000, while this year they have set a goal of $50,000. So far, $17,500 has been raised. Among the donors to date: Two students at Nevada High School who put on a fundraiser in February as a class project and brought in $2,500.
-
Parents of triplets embarking on Heart Association campaign
To the casual observer, it sounds odd: One of their triplets has a heart defect, and Jayme and Chris Harper are grateful. “It could have been much worse,” Jayme said. “We just thank God every day she’s alive. We’re grateful. Be thankful for what you have, and not what you don’t have.”
- More Top Stories Headlines
-




