Former Sioux Center Coop Manager To Serve Prison Time

Sioux City, Iowa — The former general manager of a Sioux Center grain cooperative who directed subordinate managers to blend oats into soybeans has been sentenced to three months in federal prison.

According to the US Attorney’s Office, 76-year-old Kenneth Ehrp of Dakota Dunes, South Dakota, received the prison term after a November guilty plea to one count of conspiracy to commit a prohibited grain practice.

The US Attorney’s office says that in a plea agreement, and at guilty plea and sentencing hearings, Ehrp admitted that while he was the General Manager at a large, federally licensed grain warehouse headquartered in Sioux Center but with satellite locations in Iowa and elsewhere, he agreed with Calvin Diehl and others to add lower value oats to soybeans and sell the mixture as soybeans. As part of the grain blending scheme, Diehl and other individuals acting at Ehrp’s direction made false statements and executed false certificates to USDA inspectors, layered soybeans on top of oats in both storage bins and trucks to deceive USDA inspectors and customers about the quality and quantity of the grain, and made false entries and adjustments in reports provided to the grain warehouse’s bank.

The US Attorney’s office says that evidence showed that in March 2017, one of Ehrp’s subordinate managers instructed a warehouse manager in Worthing, South Dakota, to blend more oats with soybeans. As a result, approximately 30 truckloads of soybeans were “spiked” with oats. After the customer happened to discover the badly “slugged” or “spiked” loads, one of the customer’s managers called Diehl and told him to stop blending oats into soybeans. The manager warned Diehl that “someone can go to jail for this.” The US Attorney’s Office reports that Diehl feigned surprise, apologized, and falsely promised that the practice would not happen in the future. However, at Ehrp’s direction, Diehl and others continued to blend oats into soybeans (even directing subordinates to remix one of the “slugged” loads) and sell them to the same unwitting customer. Ehrp himself drove to the location manager’s office in Worthing and ordered him to continue blending oats. As a result, the Worthing location manager designed a new system for blending oats into soybeans, involving an auger and a conveyer, which sprinkled oats into the semi-trucks’ hoppers and ensured the loads leaving Worthing would remain hidden.

After learning of the conspiracy, the USDA conducted a search of grain bins at the cooperative’s various locations in Iowa and South Dakota. Of the estimated 87,996 bushels of grain in the bins at these locations, the bins actually contained only 34,354 bushels of soybeans even though all of these bins had been certified as soybeans.

Ehrp was sentenced in Sioux City by United States District Court Chief Judge Leonard T. Strand to three months in federal prison and fined $50,000. He was ordered to pay over $4000 in costs of prosecution, and he also must serve a one-year term of supervised release after the prison term. There is no parole in the federal system.

Earlier this year, Diehl was also sentenced to three months’ imprisonment for his role in the grain blending scheme.

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