COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) - James Harold Simmons Jr. hoped the letter he altered from his doctor would delay him having to report to prison for a more than two-year sentence, prosecutors said. Instead, it got him more than another year behind bars, U.S. Attorney Reggie Lloyd said. Simmons, 43, was sentenced to 15 months in prison Thursday after pleading guilty in June to attempting to obstruct and influence a federal court proceeding. The Walterboro man's scheme began in September 2006, when he was ordered to report to prison to begin a 27-month sentence for transporting and receiving stolen goods, prosecutors said. But Simmons took a letter written to the court by his doctor and altered it so it said he was too sick to go behind bars, authorities said. Probation officials were suspicious of the letter and called the doctor, who confirmed it had been changed, prosecutors said. District Judge Cameron Currie ordered Simmons to spend 15 more months behind bars after he serves his original 27-month prison sentence, Lloyd said.
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