A federal court in Las Vegas, Nevada permanently enjoined
six individuals and 14 corporate entities from activities related to an alleged
mail fraud scheme, the Department of Justice announced today.
In a complaint filed in February, 2018, the United States
alleged that the defendants mailed thousands of fraudulent solicitations each
week. The solicitations purported to inform recipients that they had won large
cash or prize packages, but needed to pay a fee to claim the winnings. The
solicitations were styled as individual notices and stressed to recipients that
they must return the requested fee quickly. According to the complaint, some of
the solicitations contained what appeared to be handwritten notes
congratulating the recipients on their good fortune, while others reassured
recipients that the letters were not a scam. Individuals who sent the requested
fees did not receive the expected prizes. The complaint alleged that the Las
Vegas-based scheme defrauded consumers out of more than $10 million.
“Consumers should be able to open their mail without
encountering false promises of wealth,” said Assistant Attorney General Joseph
H. Hunt for the Department of Justice’s Civil Division. “The Department has and
will continue to relentlessly pursue schemes like this one.”
“Some of these defendants constantly changed their schemes
in attempts to stay one step ahead of the law,” said Delany DeLeon-Colon,
Inspector in Charge for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service. “These results make
clear that we will peel back the layers, find the individuals behind these
schemes, and hold them to account.”
The complaint alleged that defendant Patti Kern orchestrated
the activities of the other individual defendants, all of whom live in the Las
Vegas area. The complaint alleged that defendants Edgar Del Rio, Sean O’Connor,
and Epifanio Castro printed the solicitations; defendant Andrea Burrow opened
and processed victim responses; and defendant Stephen Fennell managed the
scheme’s lists of recipients. The solicitations were mailed under a plethora of
company names, including 11 of the entities named as corporate defendants in
the complaint.
The district court entered a default judgment against 11
defendants today and previously entered consent decrees against the nine other
defendants named in the complaint. Those orders prohibit the defendants from
mailing solicitations like those identified in the complaint, as well as from
engaging in activities related to such mailings, including receiving, handling,
or opening any victim mail responding to solicitations and using or benefiting
from lists of victims who previously responded to solicitations. Additionally,
the orders authorize the U.S. Postal Inspection Service to open mail that was
detained by law enforcement and return payments to the scheme’s victims.
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