Produce distributor Thomas Hoey, Jr. has run afoul of the law on three fronts.

Hoey, 46, was indicted Tuesday and charged with embezzling assets from the profit-sharing plan of his now-bankrupt company, the Long Island Banana Corporation. Yesterday, he was sentenced to 151 months in prison on federal charges connected to a fatal sex party in 2009. One of the two women with him in the Manhattan hotel died of a cocaine overdose, and he not only lied during the investigation into her death but convinced the surviving woman to lie about it too.

This week's activities in court follow his sentencing in February on a 2014 domestic abuse conviction. Hoey, who is married with 2 children, beat up his girlfriend, who refused to testify against him and visits him in jail, according to the New York Times. The federal Drug Enforcement Administration announced the indictment April 22, alleging that Hoey stole more than $800,000 from his company's retirement plan to pay for corporate and personal expenses.

Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced the sentencing April 23 by saying that Hoey had led a large-scale cocaine distribution conspiracy for more than five years—which led to the death of another person—and had engaged in a long-term scheme to obstruct the investigation into his crimes. Both the DEA and Bharara thanked the Clarkstown Police Department and the Rockland Sheriff's Office for their work on the two federal cases.

"Thomas Hoey not only showed complete indifference to the life-threatening situation he himself created by providing cocaine to Kim Calo, he interfered with efforts to get her medical attention," Bharara said about the 2009 sex party that led to Hoey's guilty plea on charges of conspiring to distribute narcotics, conspiring to suborn perjury, and obstruction of justice. "He also waged an ongoing campaign, beginning immediately upon Ms. Calo's collapse, to destroy evidence, lie to investigators, and obstruct a grand jury investigation by pressuring a witness to perjure herself. The sentence he has received reflects the callousness of his crimes."

On the embezzlement indictment, DEA officials alleged that Hoey, the owner and president of the banana company and trustee for its profit-sharing plan, transferred more than $800,000 from the plan to the company's corporate accounts. He then used the money to cover significant negative balances in the Company's accounts, to purchase, among other things, hundreds of thousands of dollars of produce, and for personal expenses.