He
had those checks made payable to Navy Federal Credit Union, where he
and his wife had opened a personal account in 2014, according to court
filings.
Authorities charged him Aug. 30 in Washington and said the scheme began in February 2017.
Mohammed
worked as a manager since 2015 at the bank branch near the intersection
of Quaker Lane and King Street, where he started as a teller about 10
years earlier and later became a personal banker.
He
targeted customers who had enough money that his unauthorized
withdrawals would not attract notice and used the customers’ personal
identification information, such as driver’s license numbers, kept in
bank records, according to the filings.
Court
papers did not explain what Mohammed, who has lived in the District and
Northern Virginia, used the money for but said he spent or used
virtually all of it.
In
addition to the prison sentence, U.S. District Court Judge Ellen S.
Huvelle ordered three years of supervised release and that he pay the
bank $509,864.95 in restitution and $38,779.01 as a forfeiture money
judgment.
Full Article & Source:
Former bank manager sentenced to prison for stealing half-million dollars from elderly clients
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