SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Sergio Doriante Sanchez Reyna, 25, of
Stockton, was sentenced today by U.S. District Judge Morrison C. England Jr. to
four years and three months in prison and ordered to pay $436,091 in restitution
for his role in a scheme to defraud the State of California by filing false
unemployment insurance claims, U.S. Attorney McGregor W. Scott announced.
“Sergio Reyna conspired with others in an unemployment
insurance (UI) fraud scheme targeted at the California Employment Development
Department (EDD). Reyna facilitated the scheme by receiving EDD documents and
obtaining debit cards issued in the names of identity theft victims to
fraudulently obtain the UI benefits. We will continue to work with our federal
and state law enforcement partners to safeguard the UI system from those who
exploit these benefit programs,” said Abel Salinas, Special Agent-in-Charge,
Los Angeles Region, U.S. Department of Labor Office of Inspector General.
“This scheme exploited a fund designed to support people in
California in a time of need, stealing money from a vital fund,” said Special
Agent in Charge Sean Ragan of the Sacramento Field Office. “The FBI is
committed to working with our state and federal partners to uncover fraud
committed by government employees who exploit their trusted positions and
damage the reputation of their fellow government employees who serve the public.”
According to court documents, between December 12, 2014, and
July 14, 2016, Reyna conspired with others to defraud the state of California.
Pamela Emanuel, 57, of San Jose, worked as a tax compliance representative for
the California Employment Development Department. She allegedly used her
position to access the personal identifying information of workers throughout
California, and she and her co-conspirators used that information to file
fraudulent unemployment claims in the names of the unknowing victims.
The conspirators took several steps to avoid detection. In
some instances, they used a Virtual Private Network designed to mask their IP
addresses when making online filings. When the defendants filed claims with
EDD, they usually provided the name of a fake business as the claimant’s last
employer. As a result, the victim’s true employer was not immediately notified
that a claim was filed.
Reyna participated in the scheme by receiving and
facilitating EDD documents at two Stockton addresses associated or controlled
by him and using at least 18 EDD debit cards issued in the names of
identity-theft victims to withdraw the fraudulently obtained benefits. In
total, the conspirators filed at least 269 false claims seeking over $2.5
million in fraudulent benefits. EDD’s actual overpayment was approximately
$887,199.
This case is the product of an investigation by the U.S.
Department of Labor Office of Inspector General, the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the California Employment Development Department,
Investigations Division. Assistant U.S. Attorney Amy Schuller Hitchcock is
prosecuting the case.
On August 16, 2018, Brittany Maunakea, 29 of Manteca, was
sentenced to two and a half years in prison. Gregory Lee, 56, of Antioch, has
pleaded guilty and is scheduled to be sentenced on December 13, 2018. The
charges against Emanuel and Russell White III, 35, of Turlock, are pending;
they are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty beyond a reasonable
doubt.
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