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‘Back to square one': Estranged wife of Osceola sheriff to remain jailed in racketeering case
‘Back to square one': Estranged wife of Osceola sheriff to remain jailed in racketeering case

Yahoo

time04-07-2025

  • Yahoo

‘Back to square one': Estranged wife of Osceola sheriff to remain jailed in racketeering case

The wife of suspended Osceola County Sheriff Marcos Lopez, ensnared in the racketeering case against him, will remain behind bars after judge ruled Thursday she came up short $20,000 in trying to pay her bond. Robin Severance-Lopez has been in the Lake County Jail since June 23, charged with conspiracy to commit racketeering. Prosecutors have accused her of moving proceeds from an illegal gambling operation across several bank accounts she shared with Lopez. She has pleaded not guilty to the charge. Following her arrest, she was ordered to put up $400,000 in collateral plus pay another 10% to a bondsman to secure her release, with the stipulation that she prove the sources of the funds are legal. After a three-hour hearing, Circuit Judge Brian Welke ruled Severance-Lopez did not have to pay the additional 10%, but he was not convinced all the money was clean. Her lawyer, Michelle Yard, said the value of her family's home in Harmony, a check from a relative and two checks from Severance-Lopez's bank account would be enough to cover the bond. As proof her personal money was legal, she also cited 18 months of bank statements from several joint accounts demonstrating the only deposits were from Lopez's income as sheriff, his veteran benefits and a tax refund from the IRS. Brian Tagler, an undercover task force officer with the Orange County Sheriff's Office whose face was not shown in court, testified there was no evidence illegal money was mixed into the deposits from that period. But state prosecutors argued the money was being supplemented from another source. 'This is a common tactic used in order to … create confusion and hide the source of the excess money,' prosecutor Colleen Moore said. 'All the legitimate income that has been established here is already spent by way or Mrs. Lopez and Mr. Lopez's expenses.' Yard proposed that Severance-Lopez could use funds from a 2023 property sale totaling $57,000 to make up the difference. Welke, however, punted the issue to at least next week. 'At this point, we're back to square one where we have to get the statewide prosecutor to either agree she has a clean $20,000 or be back for a hearing again,' Yard told reporters outside the Lake County Courthouse. The prosecutors declined to comment as they left the courtroom. Six people face charges in what prosecutors described as an illegal gambling empire that began with an illicit casino in Kissimmee called The Eclipse and later expanded into Lake County. Lopez and Severance-Lopez, they allege, played 'ministerial roles' as part of the operation, which allegedly generated $21.6 million. The extent of the claims are documented in a 255-page affidavit that remains under seal while one co-defendant, Ying Zhang, remains free. Over the years, prosecutors said Lopez made between $600,000 and $700,000 in illegal proceeds that either went to him personally or as campaign contributions. His involvement purportedly began in 2019, a year before he was elected Osceola's first Hispanic sheriff and continued throughout his tenure at the sheriff's office, where prosecutors contend he used his position to shield The Eclipse and its workers from legal scrutiny. Prosecutors said Severance-Lopez was found to have withdrawn money on the day of Lopez's arrest and moved it to other accounts. Yard said that money was used to pay bills and put toward her husband's bail. The case against Severance-Lopez, Yard said, hinges on a single email to Zhang containing a W-9 tax form. At no point, she added, did her client join a criminal enterprise. In fact, she filed for divorce from Lopez in 2023 after being separated since 2019. That proceeding, filed in Brevard County, is ongoing. 'The case looks incredibly weak,' Yard said. 'I think that the weight of the evidence against Robin is abysmal. There is nothing showing that she joined any conspiracy to commit any racketeering activity.'

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