Search Site   
Current News Stories
Illinois ‘Pink Hat Farmer’ gains international following through social media advocacy
2026 Iowa Farm Custom Rate Survey projects average costs
Outlook through April 28 calls for warmer temperatures, above normal precipitation
Fear of embarrassing photos
KCARD joins USDA’s Certified Agricultural Mediation Program
Inflation is becoming market topic as food cost index rises
Mobile ag classroom helps students learn how plants grow
Antitrust lawsuit filed against some U.S. fertilizer companies citing price issues
Farm equipment moved quickly at Dick Coulter liquidation auction
Insurer: Illinois farm collision claims reached 180 last year
Indiana to invest $1 billion to add jobs in ag, life sciences
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Federal trial delay in grain fraud case
 
GREENWOOD, Miss. (AP) — A federal trial has been delayed until May for the former leader of a Mississippi grain storage and processing company who is charged with defrauding farmers, banks and the Mississippi Department of Agriculture of tens of millions of dollars.
John R. Coleman of Greenwood, Mississippi, is the former CEO of Express Grain Terminals, LLC. His trial originally was set to begin Jan. 30 in Oxford. U.S. District Judge Michael Mills recently signed an order setting a new trial date of May 8.
Coleman’s attorney, John Colette, requested a delay, saying he needed a significant amount of time to obtain, review and go over evidence with Coleman. He said Coleman did not object.
U.S. Attorney Clay Joyner and Mississippi Attorney General Lynn Fitch announced in early December that a federal grand jury had indicted Coleman on Nov. 15.
Federal court documents say that from June 2018 to October 2022, Coleman altered Express Grain’s audited financial statements to receive a state warehouse license and lied about the amount of debt he owed on corn, wheat, soybeans or other crops held at the facility.
The federal indictment said farmers delivered grain to Express Grain throughout the 2021 harvest season but did not receive payment.
“Coleman’s fraud caused widespread financial hardship and suffering throughout the Mississippi Delta and elsewhere,” the federal indictment said.
In September 2021, Express Grain had $70 million in outstanding loans from UMB Bank in Kansas City, Missouri.
If convicted on the federal charges, Coleman would face up to 180 years in prison.

1/3/2023