A Mahoning County grand jury
handed up indictments against Vettori-Caraballo on charges of mail
fraud, structuring cash deposits and making false statements to law
enforcement. Vettori-Caraballo, 50, and her husband, Ismael Caraballo,
60, were also charged with one count of filing a false tax return.
In her private practice, Vettori-Caraballo provided estate
planning services to Robert Sampson, including drafting his will,
according to the indictment. 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 his
sister, Dolores Falgiani, as the administrator three days later,
according to the indictment.
Vettori-Caraballo had also prepared Falgiani’s will,
according to the indictment. The will made 16 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 told
Vettori-Caraballo that she had several shoeboxes of cash stored at her
residence, the indictment states.
Falgiani was found dead in her home on March 10, 2016,
according to the indictment. Vettori-Caraballo filed an application two
weeks later in Mahoning County Probate Court to probate Falgiani’s
estate.
On May 2, she reported having found $20,000 in cash in the
residence and depositing it into the estate, according to the
indictment. She filed a notice of newly discovered assets with the court
on several subsequent occasions in 2016 and 2017.
However, the amounts were not what she actually found,
according to the indictment. Investigators said she made 22 deposits in
her name into five banks within four weeks to avoid regulations that
require banks to report cash transactions over $10,000 to the IRS, the
indictment states.
The information charges that Vettori-Caraballo lied to the
FBI when she was confronted about the theft and the structuring of cash
deposits.
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 re-elected in 2006 and 2012,
according to the indictment.
Full Article & Source:
Indictment: Ex-judge stole cash from client
1 comment:
And she thought this was worth losing her career and good name?
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