Search Site   
Current News Stories
Cattle producers showing renewed interest in using sudangrass in pastures to add nutrition, feed volume
Time to plan for harvest and for grain storage needs
Cranberry harvest begins in Wisconsin, other states
Craft distillers are tapping into vanishing heirloom corn varieties
USDA raises 2025, 2026 milk output, citing increased cow numbers
Ohio couple helps to encourage 4-H members’ love of horses, other animals
Bill reducing family farm death reporting fees advances in Michigan
Fiber producers, artisans looking to grow their market; finding local mills a challenge
Highlights of the Half Century of Progress
Madisonville North Hopkins FFA wins first-ever salsa challenge
IPPA rolls out apprentice program on some junior college campuses
   
News Articles
Search News  
   
Man sentenced in manure scheme
 
FRESNO, Calif. (AP) – A California man is going to prison for running a cow dung- to-green energy scheme that authorities say was a load of manure.
Ray Brewer, 66, of Porterville, was sentenced June 26 to six years and nine months in federal prison in a years-long scam that bilked investors out of $8.75 million, according to a statement from the U.S. attorney’s office.
Brewer ran a scheme from 2014 through 2019 in which he claimed to be building anaerobic digesters at dairies in California’s Fresno, Kern, Kings and Tulare counties and in Idaho.
Brewer told investors he would turn cow manure into methane while they would receive 66 percent of net profits and tax incentives, federal prosecutors said.
Brewer took investors on tours of dairies where he allegedly planned to build the digesters and claimed to have raised millions of dollars for the work. He sent them forged lease agreements with dairy owners, faked loan agreements with banks, phony contracts with multinational companies and bogus pictures of the machines under construction.
The investors’ money went into several bank accounts, and Brewer spent it on himself.
He also kept his investors up to date on the non-existent construction with fake schedules, invoices, power generation reports and pictures, authorities said.
Brewer also refunded money to some investors, using money obtained from other investors.
When investors found out they had been bilked, some won lawsuits against him. But Brewer moved to Sheridan, Mont., and assumed a new identity before he was finally arrested, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

7/3/2023