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Lindberg, 54, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit offenses against the U.S. and one count of money laundering in connection with a scheme to defraud insurance regulators and ...
Lindberg and Gray were among four people indicted in 2019, accused of trying to give $1.5 million to Insurance Commissioner Mike Causey’s election campaign in exchange for the removal of an ...
Durham businessman Greg Lindberg offered millions of dollars if a top NC official would remove a regulator skeptical of his business practices. He was sentenced to seven years, but he won his ...
Greg Lindberg was born in San Mateo, California, United States in 1970, the youngest of five children. His father was an airline pilot. He attended Crystal Springs Uplands School in Hillsborough, California before studying at Yale University, where he graduated with an economics degree in 1993. [4]
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Starting that year, Causey began cooperating with the FBI in the investigation of political corruption charges related to Greg Lindberg. [4] After his conviction, Lindberg filed a lawsuit alleging Causey made materially false representations to the State Ethics Board of North Carolina, to the FBI and under oath in federal court. [5]
In 2017, Greg Lindberg, a North Carolina billionaire and campaign megadonor, initiated meetings with Mike Causey, the state’s insurance commissioner, about the regulations on his insurance firm.
The next year, another SPA, User:MT9429, defended Lindberg after an article in The Wall Street Journal reported that Lindberg had diverted $2 billion from insurance company reserves for his own use. MT9429 improperly cited a press release as a reliable source and stated that Lindberg "refuted" the WSJ story, rather than just "disputed" it.