The Gulf Coast’s Best Kept Secret
Growing up in south Mississippi, you grow accustomed to nothing being a secret. Just when you think you’ve managed to keep the cover on some interesting tidbit and are sure you’re the only one privy to some enticing story, you realize everyone else, from the state line of Alabama to the state line of Louisiana, is thinking the same thing you are: everyone thinks they know something no one else knows, only to find out everyone already knew. Until today.
Turns out Gulfport’s mayor, Brent Warr, one of the most favorite politicians on the coast, has been indicted on sixteen federal charges, including conspiracy to defraud the federal government by lying to both FEMA and HUD to receive monies set aside for Hurricane Katrina victims. He and his wife, Laura, have both been indicted and each
faces up to 210 years in prison and over $4 million dollars in fines. Here’s the shocker: no one knew. No one was aware they were even due in court for any reason today. It wasn’t until the indictment was opened and read in the U.S. District Court could you hear the gasps across the state. They both have pleaded innocent in the presence of their lawyer.
They’ve been accused of taking money earmarked for residents whose primary residences were damaged and needed financial assistance to restore their homes. The home the Warrs’ claimed was indeed damaged. It’s located directly on the beach and is a beautiful white mansion, complete with huge white columns, indicative of how homes were built in the late 1800s. The problem, though, is that it wasn’t their primary residence and in fact, they weren’t even living in it. His only statement, made today, reads, “This inquiry has been going on for more than a year now, and we hope and pray for a much faster resolution. We have entered a plea of not guilty. Out of respect for the justice system and the government, I will not speak further about the claim made against us.” That’s interesting because he makes no mention of his neighbors and the citizens as a whole in Gulfport who didn’t have access to these kinds of funds, and in fact, many are still waiting for some kind of resolution to their own claims. These are the same neighbors and citizens who elected him into office only a month before Katrina made landfall in August, 2005. In fact, he was so popular that his name had been mentioned several times when a replacement for Senator Lott was being considered. At the time, he said he wouldn’t be pursuing that option since he was so busy with the recovery effort on the coast.
The indictment reads:
Count 1: Conspiracy to defraud the federal government by lying to FEMA and HUD to receive emergency disaster assistance funds for their beachfront mansion.
Count 2: Fraud for filing a FEMA disaster claim in which they misrepresented 1814 Beach Drive as their home when Katrina hit.
Counts 3-6: False statements about the beach home; specifically, filing a disaster assistance claim, signing a sworn statement that information in the FEMA claim was true, filing for a federal homeowners assistance grant from HUD, swearing in a statement to the Mississippi Development Authority that information in the grant application was true.
Maximum penalty on each count, counts 1-6: five years in prison, $250,000 fine.
Counts 7-8: Theft of FEMA funds; theft of HUD funds.
Maximum penalty on each count, counts 7 and 8: 10 years in prison, $250,000 fine.
Counts 9-11: Wire fraud for electronic transmissions from FEMA of $2,000, $2,358, and $5,200 from Sept. 15, 2005 through Nov. 29, 2005.
Count 12: Mail fraud for $150,000 homeowners grant check on Jan. 19, 2007.
Counts 13-16: Mail fraud against Lexington Insurance Co. regarding misrepresentations about personal property, alternate living expenses and the extent of renovations in relation to the beach home; misrepresentations resulted in checks Lexington mailed for $4,271.33, $29,526.31, $29,442.46 and $25,200, each representing a separate charge.
- Maximum penalty on each count, counts 9-16: 20 years in prison and $250,000 fine.
For now, the trial’s been set for April 6th.





