Security News: Young Laredo man charged for smuggling five resulting in rollover crash

Source: United States Department of Justice News

LAREDO, Texas – An 18-year-old man residing in Laredo has been indicted on charges of alien smuggling causing serious bodily injury, announced U.S. Attorney Jennifer B. Lowery.

Today, a federal grand jury returned the two-count indictment against Cesar Alberto Rodriguez. He is expected to appear for his arraignment before a U.S. Magistrate Judge in the near future.

According to the criminal complaint originally filed in the case, on Sept. 13, Rodriguez drove a pickup truck carrying two residential air-conditioning units into the Hebbronville Border Patrol (BP) checkpoint. There, a K-9 allegedly alerted law enforcement to the presence of humans at the bed of the truck. They conducted an investigation and discovered undocumented individuals concealed inside the units, according to the charges.

At that time, the charges allege law enforcement asked Rodriguez for his identification. After handing them his Texas ID card, he allegedly put his truck into drive and sped away from the checkpoint.

The complaint alleges authorities found his vehicle in Bruni rolled over with debris scattered around it. At the scene, they found five injured undocumented individuals who were later transported to a hospital for treatment, according to the charges. One allegedly had to be air lifted to another location for further treatment. 

If convicted, Rodriguez faces up to 20 years in federal prison and a possible $250,000 maximum fine.

Homeland Security Investigations conducted the investigation with the assistance of BP. Assistant U.S. Attorney Paul A. Harrison is prosecuting the case.

An indictment is a formal accusation of criminal conduct, not evidence.
A defendant is presumed innocent unless convicted through due process of law.

Security News: UNITED STATES ATTORNEY ANNOUNCES EFFORTS TO COMBAT FRAUD AGAINST SENIORS IN SOUTHERN ILLINOIS

Source: United States Department of Justice News

FAIRVIEW HEIGHTS, Ill. – In connection with the Department of Justice’s announcement of its Elder 
Justice Sweep earlier today, United States Attorney for the Southern District of Illinois, Rachelle 
Aud Crowe, made the following announcement:
“Combating fraud against the elderly is the number one priority of our Fraud & Corruption section,”
U.S. Attorney Crowe stated.  “Anytime a senior is victimized, we work very hard to find the 
responsible criminals and bring them to justice.”

Six federal prosecutors are assigned to the district’s Fraud & Corruption section.  They are 
Assistant United States Attorneys:  Scott Verseman, Chief; Kevin Burke, Zoe Gross, Peter Reed, 
Steve Weinhoeft and Luke Weissler.

As an example of the office’s efforts to hold accountable those who harm the elderly, U.S. Attorney 
Crowe cited to the recent guilty plea of Ashley McKinney, 39, of Cahokia, Illinois.  McKinney’s co- 
defendant, Erica Rose, 33, of East St. Louis, Illinois, worked as a home healthcare provider for 
elderly persons in the Metro East.  While working in the victims’ homes, Rose stole their bank 
account information and provided it to McKinney.  McKinney then used that information to make 
illegal purchases, including purchasing an automobile.  McKinney and Rose were indicted in January 
2020, but McKinney remained a fugitive until she was eventually hunted down and arrested by the 
United States Marshals.  McKinney will be sentenced on November 22, 2022.  Rose previously pled 
guilty and was sentenced to prison.

U.S. Attorney Crowe also noted that Jaykumar Patel, 33, of Florida, pled guilty on June 28, 2022, 
to assisting in a fraud scheme that victimized an elderly woman in Alton, Illinois.  That fraud 
scheme, which was based in the country of India, tried to convince seniors that their identities 
had been stolen and that they needed to pay thousands of dollars to fix the situation.  Patel was a 
“Money Mule” for the organization.  “Money Mules” are individuals who receive funds from victims 
and send the money on to the criminals who conduct the schemes.  Patel will be sentenced on January 
5, 2023.

“In addition to the Identity Theft schemes, there are a variety of other schemes out there that 
seniors need to be on the look out for,” added U.S. Attorney Crowe.  “Those schemes include:  (1) 
Grandparents Scams – where fraudsters impersonate seniors’ grandchildren, or some other loved one, 
and try to convince the seniors that they need funds immediately, usually for some type of medical 
or legal emergency; (2) Romance Scams – where scammers meet seniors online, usually through dating sites, pretend to fall in love with them, and then persuade the seniors to send them money; (3) Tax Scams – where fraudsters falsely tell seniors that they owe back taxes and must make immediate 
payments; and (4) Lottery Scams – where fraudsters try to convince seniors that they have won the 
lottery or some other type of prize, but need to send money first for taxes or fees.”
“Another situation we’re seeing,” added U.S. Attorney Crowe, “is scammers recruiting seniors to 
participate in, and help them with, their fraud scams.  When seniors knowingly help these scammers, 
they themselves can be facing federal prison sentences.”

As an example of this situation, U.S. Attorney Crowe noted last week’s guilty plea by Danny Vaughn, 
64, of Centralia, Illinois.  A few years ago, Vaughn met a person on a dating site whom he thought 
was a young woman that was interested in having a relationship with him.  This person turned out to 
be a scammer.  The scammer convinced Vaughn to engage in illegal activity, including purchasing 
items using stolen credit cards and then shipping the stolen items overseas, and depositing 
counterfeit checks into his bank accounts and sending that money overseas.  Vaughn will be 
sentenced on January 18, 2023.

When asked what seniors can do to avoid being victimized, U.S. Attorney Crowe gave the following 
tips:

1.   Be wary of individuals you meet online or over the phone;

2.   If someone you’ve never met in person claims to be in love with you, there’s a good chance 
that person is a scammer;

3.   If someone you’ve never met before asks you for, or demands, money, there’s a good chance it’s 
a scam;

4.   If someone is asking you for, or demanding, money, ask your son, daughter, loved one, or good 
friend what they think.  This is true even if the person asking for money claims there is no time 
for you to talk with your family or friends; and

5.   If someone contacts you claiming to be from a company or institution, such as the IRS or your 
bank, hang up and call them back on a telephone number you look up yourself. This will enable you 
to talk to representatives of the real company or institutions.

“In summary, we want to do everything we can to protect our seniors from becoming victims.  A big 
part of that is making seniors aware of the fraud scams out there.  If you have an elderly relative 
or friend, I hope you’ll take a few minutes to discuss this topic with them.  If you are a senior 
yourself, my advice and avoid falling prey to these vicious scammers.”

Security News: Washington man admits trafficking meth, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl to Cascade County, Rocky Boy’s Indian Reservation

Source: United States Department of Justice News

GREAT FALLS — A Washington man admitted to a drug trafficking crime today after law enforcement seized more than five pounds of methamphetamine along with other drugs from his vehicle near Great Falls last year, U.S. Attorney Jesse Laslovich said.

Jorge Perez, aka Chicago, 41, of Spokane, Washington, pleaded guilty to possession with intent to distribute controlled substances. Perez faces a mandatory minimum of 10 years to life in prison, a $10 million fine and at least five years of supervised release.

Chief U.S. District Judge Brian M. Morris presided. The court will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors. Sentencing was set for Feb. 16, 2023. Perez was detained pending further proceedings.

The government alleged in court documents that in March 2022, witnesses in Great Falls reported to law enforcement that they had been working with Perez to bring large quantities of meth, heroin, cocaine and fentanyl from Spokane to the Great Falls area for distribution. The FBI’s investigation identified the vehicle Perez was driving and, with assistance from local law enforcement, stopped the vehicle outside of Great Falls on June 11, 2022. Perez was the driver and sole occupant and had more than $4,000 cash on his person. Perez admitted there were pounds of drugs in the vehicle. Law enforcement seized approximately five pounds of meth, which is the equivalent of 18,120 doses, along with cocaine and fentanyl pills. In a second traffic stop in which Perez was a passenger, law enforcement found meth, cocaine and heroin in the vehicle. In a third traffic stop, on the Rocky Boy’s Indian Reservation, in which Perez was the driver and sole passenger, law enforcement found meth, cocaine and fentanyl.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Ethan R. Plaut is prosecuting the case, which was investigated by the FBI, Homeland Security Investigations, Great Falls Police Department, Cascade County Sheriff’s Office, Montana Highway Patrol and Chippewa Cree Law Enforcement.

This case is part of Project Safe Neighborhoods (PSN), a program bringing together all levels of law enforcement and the communities they serve to reduce violent crime and gun violence, and to make our neighborhoods safer for everyone. On May 26, 2021, the Department launched a violent crime reduction strategy strengthening PSN based on these core principles: fostering trust and legitimacy in our communities, supporting community-based organizations that help prevent violence from occurring in the first place, setting focused and strategic enforcement priorities, and measuring the results.

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Security News: South Florida Resident Sentenced to 35 Years in Prison for Production and Distribution of Child Pornography

Source: United States Department of Justice News

MIAMI – Billy Joe Gann, Jr., 32, of Sebring, has been sentenced to 420 months in federal prison for producing and distributing child pornography.

Court records show that in June of 2021, Gann began chatting online with a person whom he believed to be a woman living with her young daughter in Wisconsin. During the chats, Gann sent images and a video of a seven-year-old in lascivious poses and discussed his role in the girl’s sexual molestation. Gann encouraged the woman he believed to be a Wisconsin mother, and like-minded predator, to get her 14-year-old daughter drunk and sexually assault her after she was passed out.  Law enforcement officers arrested Gann soon after that chat.  

Juan Antonio Gonzalez, U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida, and Robert M. DeWitt, Acting Special Agent in Charge, FBI Miami, announced the sentence that U.S. District Judge Robin L. Rosenberg imposed yesterday in West Palm Beach.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood (PSC), a nationwide initiative launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse. Led by United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who sexually exploit children, and to identify and rescue victims. For more information about the Project Safe Childhood initiative and for information regarding Internet safety, please visit www.justice.gov/psc.

FBI Miami investigated the case with assistance from the Winnebago County Sheriff’s Office and the Highlands County Sheriff’s Office, Special Victims Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney Luisa Honora Berti prosecuted it.

Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the District Court for the Southern District of Florida at www.flsd.uscourts.gov or at http://pacer.flsd.uscourts.gov, case number is 21-cr-14034.

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Security News: U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland Joins the Justice Department’s Transnational Elder Fraud Strike Force to Protect Older Americans

Source: United States Department of Justice News

Baltimore, Maryland – United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Erek L. Barron announced today that as part of the Office’s continuing efforts to protect older adults and to bring perpetrators of fraud schemes to justice, the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office is joining the Justice Department’s Transnational Elder Fraud Strike Force, as one of 14 additional U.S. Attorney’s Offices.

Since 2019, current Strike Force members — including the Justice Department’s Consumer Protection Branch, six U.S. Attorneys’ Offices, the FBI, U.S. Postal Inspection Service and Homeland Security Investigations — have brought successful cases against the largest and most harmful global elder fraud schemes and worked with foreign law enforcement to disrupt criminal enterprises, disable their infrastructure and bring perpetrators to justice.  Expansion of the Strike Force will help to coordinate the Department’s ongoing efforts to combat sophisticated fraud schemes that target or disproportionately impact older adults.  The expansion will increase the total number of U.S. Attorneys’ Offices comprising the Strike Force from six to 20, including Maryland and all of the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices in the states of California, Arizona, Texas, Florida, Georgia, and New York.

“Targeting vulnerable victims is unconscionable,” said Erek L. Barron, United States Attorney for the District of Maryland. “The Maryland Transnational Elder Fraud Strike Force will use every resource available to protect victims and prosecute those who would abuse them.”

“We are intensifying our efforts nationwide to protect older adults, including by more than tripling the number of U.S. Attorneys’ offices participating in our Transnational Elder Fraud Strike Force dedicated to disrupting, dismantling and prosecuting foreign-based fraud schemes that target American seniors,” said Attorney General Merrick B. Garland. “This expansion builds on the Justice Department’s existing work to hold accountable those who steal funds from older adults, including by returning those funds to the victims where possible.”

The Strike Force expansion will further enhance the Department’s existing efforts to protect older adults from fraud and exploitation.  During the period from September 2021 to September 2022, Department personnel and its law enforcement partners pursued approximately 260 cases involving more than 600 defendants, both bringing new cases and advancing those previously charged.  The matters tackled by the Department and its partners ranged from mass-marketing scams that impacted thousands of victims to bad actors scamming their neighbors. Substantial efforts were also made over the last year to return money to fraud victims.

The Department also highlighted other efforts, including success in returning money to victims and efforts to combat grandparent scams.  In the past year, the Department has notified over 550,000 people that they may be eligible for payments.  Notifications were made to consumers whose information was sold by one of three data companies prosecuted by the Department and were later victims of advance fee scams involving “sweepstakes” or “astrology” solicitations that falsely promised prizes or individualized services in return for a fee.  More than 160,000 of those victims cashed checks totaling $62 million, and thousands more are eligible to receive checks.  

In Maryland, defendant Oluwaseyi Akinyemi was sentenced to eight years in federal prison and ordered to pay restitution of $486,119.07 to his victims in a social media advanced fee scheme that targeted senior victims.  Akinyemi and at least one co-conspirator targeted elderly victims on social media, representing themselves as agents of both real and fictitious government agencies and offering victims non-existent financial rewards if the victims first sent cash, money orders, or gift cards to cover associated “taxes and fees.”  Believing that they would receive a financial reward, the victims sent cash, money orders, gift cards, and other valuable items through the mail to Akinyemi who lived in Landover, Maryland at the time. 

The Justice Department also notified consumers who paid fraudsters perpetrating person-in-need scams and job scams via Western Union.  In the past year, the Department has identified and contacted over 300,000 consumers who may be eligible for remission.  Since March of 2020 more than 148,000 victims have received more than $366 million as a result of a 2017 criminal resolution with Western Union for the company’s willful failure to maintain an effective anti-money laundering program and its aiding and abetting of wire fraud.

Over the past year, the Department pursued cases against the perpetrators of “grandparent scams,” otherwise known as “person-in-need scams.” These scams typically begin when a fraudster, often based overseas, contacts an older adult and poses as either a grandchild, other family member or someone calling on behalf of a family member. Call recipients are told that their family member is in jeopardy and is urgently in need of money.  When recently sentencing one of eight perpetrators of a grandparent scam indicted under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act, a federal judge described such scams “heartbreakingly evil.”  The Department is working with government partners and others to raise awareness about these schemes.

This past year, the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Maryland has prosecuted several defendants participating in far-reaching schemes that aim to defraud elderly victims.  For example, two defendants pleaded guilty to defrauding more than 70 elderly victims of more than $2.4 million in a “Grandparent Scam.”  In addition, two defendants in Maryland were sentenced to federal prison in connection with a romance scam.  Brothers David and Lesley Annor were sentenced to three years and to 20 months in federal prison, respectively, for conspiracy to commit money laundering in connection with a romance scheme in which elderly and isolated victims were induced to send money to conspirators.  The Annors received and laundered the payments from the victims.  In addition to jail time, the Annors were also ordered to pay $6,278,250 in restitution to the victims. 

As part of the efforts to prevent elder fraud, members of the U.S. Attorney’s Office engaged in outreach to the community and to industry to raise awareness about scams and exploitation and how to keep from becoming a victim.  This year, U.S. Attorney Erek L. Barron participated in a tele-town hall with AARP on World Elder Abuse Awareness Day to discuss fraud schemes targeting seniors and how to avoid them, including resources for reporting fraud.  The U.S. Attorney’s Office also participated in meetings at senior housing communities and events for senior citizens, senior days at minor league baseball games, and other events to educate seniors and their families on how to spot and avoid financial scams.  The U.S. Attorney’s Office also participated in a presentation with the Maryland Banker’s Association on how banks can become involved in preventing and disrupting fraud schemes targeting seniors.  Member of the office also presented at the Maryland State Bar Association’s annual meeting to discuss federal elder fraud prosecutions, statistics relating to elder fraud, current trends, and resources for reporting.

Reporting from consumers about fraud and fraud attempts is critical to law enforcements efforts to investigate and prosecute schemes targeting older adults.  If you or someone you know is age 60 or older and has been a victim of financial fraud, help is available the National Elder Fraud Hotline: 1-833-FRAUD-11 (1-833-372-8311).  This Department of Justice Hotline, managed by the Office for Victims of Crime, is staffed by experienced professionals who provide personalized support to callers by assessing the needs of the victim and identifying next steps.  Case managers will identify appropriate reporting agencies, provide information to callers to assist them in reporting or connect them with agencies, and provide resources and referrals on a case-by-case basis.  The hotline is staffed from 10:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Monday through Friday.  English, Spanish, and other languages are available.  More information about the Department’s elder justice efforts can be found on the Department’s Elder Justice website, www.elderjustice.gov.

For more information on the Maryland U.S. Attorney’s Office, its priorities, and resources available to help seniors, please visit www.justice.gov/usao-md and https://www.justice.gov/usao-md/elder-justice-initiative

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