LOS ANGELES
– Federal authorities this morning arrested eight people named in a federal
grand jury indictment that alleges check-kiting schemes that used hundreds of
altered Armenian passports to fraudulently open bank accounts and steal nearly
$1.5 million from Bank of America and Wells Fargo. A ninth defendant in this
case is currently being sought by authorities.
The
investigation led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland
Security Investigations found that the defendants obtained genuine Armenian
passports issued to other people, altered the passports to include the photos
of the defendants, and used the fraudulent documents to obtain other identity
documents and to open bank accounts at the victim banks.
The 36-count
indictment unsealed today alleges that the defendants used the bank accounts,
which were opened in the names that appeared on the altered passports, to write
bad checks to other fraudulently obtained bank accounts. The defendants
allegedly exploited bank rules that allowed them to transfer money from one
account to another, and then to immediately withdraw funds at ATMs in Las Vegas
casinos and other locations before the checks bounced.
The
indictment alleges that the defendants used 331 fraudulently altered Armenian
passports to steal, or attempt to steal, $1,556,336 from Bank of America. They
actually obtained approximately $1.12 million.
Three of the
defendants were also charged with perpetrating a similar fraud scheme against
Wells Fargo that resulted in a loss of approximately $370,000.
The
defendants arrested this morning are:
Ara Malkhasyan,
48, of Winnetka;
Smbat Khechumyan,
38, of North Hollywood;
Sveta Khechumyan,
45, of Winnetka, who is Smbat’s sister and the wife of Malkhasyan;
Harutyun
Petrosyants, 30, of Van Nuys;
Artur Harutyunyan,
34, of Encino;
Khachatur
Chobanyan, 38 of Van Nuys;
Jivan
Hakhnazaryan, 49, of Van Nuys; and
Arman Grigoryan,
37, of North Hollywood.
The ninth defendant in this case – Artak
Okhoyan, 29, of Burbank – has agreed through his attorney to surrender to
federal authorities tomorrow.
The
defendants arrested today are expected to be arraigned on the indictment this
afternoon in United States District Court in downtown Los Angeles.
The
indictment charges all of the defendants with conspiracy to commit bank fraud,
a charge that carries a statutory maximum penalty of 30 years in federal
prison. Additionally, all of the defendants are charged in at least one
substantive count of bank fraud and aggravated identity theft.
An
indictment contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every
defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty in court.
During this
investigation, Homeland Security Investigations received substantial assistance
from the Los Angeles Police Department, the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s
Department, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
This matter
is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Katherine A. Rykken of
the Major Frauds Section, and Lucy B. Jennings and Kevin Butler of the General
Crimes Section.
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