Two individuals were found guilty yesterday for their roles
in a $10 million telemarketing scheme that defrauded primarily elderly victims
in the United States from call centers in Costa Rica.
Acting Assistant Attorney General John P. Cronan of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney R. Andrew Murray of the
Western District of North Carolina made the announcement.
Following a three-day jury trial, Andrew Smith, 45, of San
Jose, Costa Rica, and Christopher Lee Griffin, 44, a U.S. citizen who
previously resided in San Jose, Costa Rica, were convicted of one count of
conspiracy to commit wire fraud, eight counts of wire fraud, one count of
conspiracy to commit money laundering and seven counts of international money
laundering. Sentencing has not yet been
set by U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Conrad of the Western District of
North Carolina, who presided over the trial.
“Andrew Smith and Christopher Lee Griffin orchestrated a
brazen telemarketing scheme from Costa Rica and stole more than $10 million,”
said Acting Assistant Attorney General Cronan.
“But what makes their crimes especially reprehensible is the harm they
caused to a significant number of elderly victims. Attorney General Jeff Sessions has called
those who exploit our senior citizens ‘cowards,’ and these convictions
demonstrate that the Department of Justice will aggressively pursue cowards
like these, no matter where they reside.”
According to the evidence presented at trial, both Smith and
Griffin worked in a call center in Costa Rica in which conspirators, who posed
as representatives of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Federal
Trade Commission (FTC), contacted victims in the United States to tell them
that that they had won a substantial “sweepstakes” prize. After convincing victims, many of whom were
elderly, that they stood to receive a significant financial reward, the
conspirators told victims that they needed to make a series of up-front
payments before collecting their supposed prize, purportedly for items like
insurance fees, taxes and customs duties.
Conspirators used a variety of means to conceal their true identities,
such as Voice over Internet Protocols, which made it appear that they were
calling from Washington, D.C., and other places in the United States. According to trial testimony, one elderly
victim who indicated she was going to stop paying was warned by a conspirator
that they knew where she and her family lived.
Smith and Griffin arranged for victims to transmit payments
through international wire transfers directly to Costa Rica or through
“runners” who collected money from victims in the United States and forwarded
payment to Smith, Griffin and others in Costa Rica, according to the evidence
presented at trial. Runners dispatched
by Smith and his conspirators sometimes met elderly victims at their homes to
collect bags of cash, which they in turn remitted to Costa Rica, the evidence
showed.
Smith, Griffin and their conspirators stole more than $10
million from victims, the evidence showed.
This case was investigated by the U.S. Postal Inspection
Service, Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation and the FBI, with
assistance from the FTC and U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland
Security Investigations. The case is
being prosecuted by Trial Attorneys William Bowne, Jennifer Farer and Anna
Kaminska of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section. The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western
District of North Carolina provided substantial assistance with this matter.
No comments:
Post a Comment