by Dylan Gibbons
According to a U.S. Department of Justice
(DOJ) press
release on August 20, a telemarketer has been sentenced to 63 months in
prison followed by three years of supervised release for his involvement in a $10
million telemarketing scheme that stole money from primarily elderly victims in
the U.S. through his call centers in Costa Rica.
“Carlin Woods, 35, of Merrillville,
Indiana, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Max Cogburn Jr. of the Western
District of North Carolina,” the DOJ said. “Woods pleaded guilty on May 15,
2017, to one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, one count of wire fraud
and one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering.”
As part of his plea agreement, Woods admitted
to working in a call center where co-conspirators falsely posed as U.S.
employees of various government agencies to convince his mostly elderly and
vulnerable victims that they had won a substantial “sweepstakes” prize. He and
his co-conspirators, then, fraudulently told victims that up-front payments were
required for a “refundable insurance fee” before receiving their prize.
According to the DOJ, they used various
applications, such as “Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) technology” to obfuscate
their locations and make it appear they were calling from a Washington, D.C.
area code.
Acting as an authority figure or
masquerading as a loved one, such as a grandchild, is a common
tactic many fraudsters targeting the elderly use to gain trust in such
cases. In the former instance, an official sounding department is enough; in
the latter instance, fraudsters often say they’re the elderly person’s
grandchild and then play a game of ‘guess who’ with the elderly person until
they can take on the identity of one of the elderly’s actual relatives.
To receive payments, Woods utilized a
system whereby victims would send money to Costa Rica or “through people in the
United States who collected money from victims and forwarded the payment to
Woods and others in Costa Rica, he admitted.”
When he was sentenced, it was determined
that Woods and his co-conspirators stole more than $1.5 million from victims as
a part of a larger network.
According to the DOJ, since President Trump
signed the bipartisan Elder Abuse Prevention and Prosecution Act (EAPPA) into
law, the DOJ has been able to participate in hundreds of additional criminal
and civil cases that “targeted or disproportionately affected seniors.”
The DOJ says that this law enabled the DOJ
to undergo the “largest elder fraud enforcement action in American history” in
March alone, wherein more
than 260 defendants were charged with some form of elder exploitation in a
nationwide elder fraud sweep.
Full Article & Source:
International telemarketing fraud sees man convicted for scamming the elderly out of $10 million
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