Former owner of the Meat Store also ordered to pay $545,000
restitution
LOUISVILLE, Ky. – The former owner of a Louisville specialty
food store was sentenced today in United States District Court, by Senior Judge
Thomas B. Russell, to 33 months in prison, three years of supervised release,
and ordered to pay $545,000 restitution for committing Food Stamp fraud,
announced United States Attorney Russell M. Coleman. There is no parole in the
federal system.
“Today’s nearly three year prison sentence and $545,000
returned to victims, underscores our commitment to investigating and prosecuting
criminals who steal from federal programs,” stated United States Attorney
Russell Coleman. “This is a crime against tax payers – we will seek to restore
every stolen dime that was meant to help those in need.”
Elias Estephane was convicted of defrauding a United States
Department of Agriculture Program on November 9, 2017, following a four-day
jury trial.
Estephane was the owner of the Meat Store located at 1066
South 28th Street and the Meat Store 2 located at 4835 Poplar Level Road. Both
were specialty food stores focusing on meats and both were accepted as
Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP), or Food Stamp retailers. SNAP
is a program administered by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA)
to provide food-purchasing assistance to low-income individuals through the
issue of (EBT) cards to recipients.
Evidence at trial showed that on multiple occasions Estephane traded
cash for SNAP benefits, in violation of program rules that only permit benefits
to be exchanged for eligible food items.
Estephane generally paid customers fifty cents on the dollar for their
benefits.
In 2015, the USDA and the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) began investigating the Meat Store’s redemption of SNAP benefits. They
targeted the Meat Store because it had a significantly higher level of
redemption of SNAP benefits compared to similar stores in the area.
Specifically, the Meat Store’s month-to-month SNAP redemptions in 2015 were
around 20 times the average redemptions from similar stores in the same
geographic area.
During the course of the investigation, USDA and FBI sent
two individuals into the Meat Store to attempt to sell SNAP benefits for cash.
Between September 1, 2015, and July 12, 2016, the two individuals exchanged
SNAP benefits for cash with defendant Estephane at the Meat Store on nine
different occasions, eight of which were captured on video. Sometimes the
individuals would present multiple SNAP EBT cards in different names during the
undercover transactions and request cash from all of them.
During the trial, the United States submitted surveillance
video of the Meat Store from four different days then compared transaction data
with the video, flagging instances in which people spent $100 or more but left
the store holding only one bag. Further
the United States had five customer witnesses and one former employee testify.
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