A federal jury sitting in Oakland, California convicted a
resident of Richmond, California yesterday for his role in a conspiracy to
steal identities and cash fraudulently obtained and stolen U.S. Treasury
checks, announced Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Caroline D.
Ciraolo, head of the Justice Department’s Tax Division; U.S. Attorney Brian J.
Stretch of the Northern District of California; and Special Agent in Charge
Michael T. Batdorf of Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation (IRS-CI).
Hugh Robinson was convicted on all charges of conspiracy to
commit theft of public money, theft of public money, and aggravated identity
theft following a five-day trial before U.S. District Court Judge Jeffery S.
White in the Northern District of California. In November 2015, Robinson was
charged, along with 10 co-defendants.
According to the indictment and evidence presented at trial, from at
least August 2013 through April 2015, Robinson conspired with his co-defendants
to obtain the names of deceased individuals by searching California death
records, and electronically file false income tax returns in the names of those
deceased individuals claiming refunds.
Robinson and his co-defendants listed addresses on these tax returns to
which they had access to enable them to retrieve the refund checks.
According to the indictment and the evidence presented at
trial, Janel McDonald, a charged co-conspirator, provided false and fraudulent
California identification documents to other co-conspirators who used the false
identifications to negotiate the refund checks. Robinson and other
co-defendants cashed checks at various Walmart stores, including a store in
Richmond, California where Robinson worked with co-conspirators to negotiate
the fraudulently obtained checks.
According to the criminal complaint, a search of Robinson’s residence
yielded U.S. Treasury checks totaling more than $237,000.
Sentencing is scheduled for Feb. 7, 2017. Robinson faces a statutory maximum sentence
of five years in prison for conspiracy to commit theft of public money, 10
years in prison for each count of theft of public money, and a mandatory
sentence of two years in prison for each count of aggravated identity
theft. Robinson also faces a period of
supervised release and monetary penalties.
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General Ciraolo, U.S.
Attorney Stretch, and Special Agent in Charge Batdorf commended agents of
IRS-CI, who conducted the investigation, and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Thomas
Newman and Jose A. Olivera, and Trial Attorney Gregory Bernstein of the Justice
Department’s Tax Division, who prosecuted the case.
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