A Mahoning County judge was indicted in federal court for
stealing at least $100,000 from a former client, said U.S. Attorney Justin E.
Herdman and FBI Special Agent in Charge Stephen D. Anthony.
Diane Vettori-Caraballo, 50 of Youngstown, was charged with
one count of mail fraud, one count of structuring cash deposits, and one count
of making false statements to law enforcement.
Vettori-Carabllo and her husband Ismael Caraballo, 60, were
also charged with one count of filing a false tax return.
Vettori-Caraballo stole between $100,200 and $328,000 in
cash that was in the home of a client when that client died in March 2016,
according to the indictment.
Vettori-Caraballo was elected to position of judge in
Mahoning County Court #3 – Sebring Court in 2002, with jurisdiction over
misdemeanor criminal and traffic charges and other matters in Sebring and
Beloit Villages and Berlin, Green, Goshen,, Ellsworth, Smith and
Washingtonville Townships. She was reelected in 2006 and 2012, according to the
indictment.
She also provided estate planning services to Robert
Sampson, including drafting his will. On Nov. 20, 2015, Vettori-Caraballo filed
an application in Mahoning County Probate Court to administer Sampson’s estate.
The application stated Sampson died without a will. The probate court, unaware
of Sampson’s will, appointed Falgiani as the administrator three days later,
according to the indictment.
Sampson died in 2015 and his closest living relative was his
sister, Dolores Falgiani. Vettori-Caraballo prepared Falgiani will on Nov. 3,
2015. The will made 16 specific bequests to relatives and friends and
bequeathed the rest of the estate to Animal Charity Human Society of Boardman
and the Angels for Animal Charity in Canfield, according to the indictment.
Sometime in October or November 2015, Falgiani stated she
was in possession of several shoeboxes of cash stored at her residence.
Falgiani was found dead in her home on March 10, 2016, according to the
indictment.
Vettori-Caraballo filed an application in Mahoning County
Probate Court to probate Falgiani’s estate on March 24, 2016. On May 2, she
reported having found cash in the residence and depositing the $20,000 into the
estate, according to the indictment.
Vettori-Caraballo filed a notice of newly discovered assets
with the court on several subsequent occasions in 2016 and 2017. Each time, she
failed to disclose the cash she had stolen, according to the indictment.
The indictment also charged Vettori-Caraballo with
structuring 22 deposits of the cash she stole into five different banks within
four weeks to avoid regulations that require banks to report cash transactions
over $10,000 to the IRS. In addition,
the information charges that Vettori-Caraballo lied to the FBI when she was
confronted about the theft and the structuring of cash deposits.
This case was investigated by the Fedearl Bureau of
Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigations. It is
being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Brian M. McDonough and Alex Abreu
If convicted, the sentence in this case will be determined
by the Court after consideration of the Federal Sentencing Guidelines, which
depend upon a number of factors unique to each case, including the defendant’s
prior criminal record, if any, the defendant’s role in the offense and the
unique characteristics of the violation.
In all cases the sentence will not exceed the statutory maximum and in
most cases it will be less than the maximum.
An indictment is a charge and not evidence of guilt. A defendant is entitled to a fair trial in
which it will be the government’s burden to prove guilt beyond a reasonable
doubt.
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