Politics & Government

Ex-Mayor Gets Wish, Granted Sixth Prison Delay

Hours before he was set to report to federal prison in New Hampshire, Jasiel Correia's sentence was delayed another month.

The former Fall River mayor won't have to report to federal prison in New Hampshire until April 5.
The former Fall River mayor won't have to report to federal prison in New Hampshire until April 5. (AP Photo/Stephan Savoia, File)

BOSTON — Jasiel Correia was arrested nearly three and a half years ago. On Thursday morning, hours before he was set to report for a six-year prison stretch, he was granted yet another delay — his sixth.

A judge approved Correia's request, which was made Tuesday. The former Fall River mayor won't have to report to federal prison in New Hampshire until April 5.

Correia, 30, was convicted last May on 21 counts of wire fraud, filing false tax returns and extortion.

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This is the sixth time Correia has been granted a delay since November, when he said his family's small business needed help through the holidays.

Then it was the COVID-19 surge, followed by his pending appeal, followed by the Bureau of Prisons saying they "couldn't accommodate a self-surrender on the weekend."

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Now comes what his lawyers said in a brief would be his final request for delay due to his co-defendant having her change of plea and sentencing date scheduled for March 7 and his deadline to file an appeal brief on March 30.

"At this time, Mr. Correia respectfully renews his suggestion that it would be most efficient simply to stay his surrender pending final resolution of whether he will be permitted to remain on release pending appeal," the motion reads.

Correia was elected mayor at 23 years old in 2015. He reluctantly stepped down from intense pressure after he was accused of bankrolling his lavish lifestyle by defrauding investors and taking bribes from marijuana companies.

Prosecutors said he used more than $230,000 of investor dollars from his "SnoOwl" app on a Mercedes, designer clothing, adult entertainment, student loans and dating services. They also said he extorted marijuana vendors who wanted to do business in Fall River.

Correia fought to remain in office even as scandal engulfed him. In one instance in March 2019, voters opted to recall him — but the next step on the ballot was choosing his successor, and he outperformed four other candidates.

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