by Rebecca Holland
An 80-year-old Nevada woman, Barbara Trickle, pled guilty on April 28 to running a years-long lottery scam in federal court that defrauded victims of more than $15 million, according to the U.S. Office of Public Affairs (PAO).
Trickle and two others stand accused of one count of conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud, a crime which 8 News Now says carries a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison, plus a minimum fine of $250,000.
Targeting older adults and those more vulnerable
While Trickle’s scheme targeted individuals of all ages and backgrounds, prosecutors say that many of the victims were older adults.
Trickle was the owner of a printing and mailing business, and supervised the lasering, printing and mailing of the fraudulent prize notices — even directing her employees to collect and analyze data to improve the response rate of victims.
Once a victim replied to the scheme with the $20 to $50 fee, they received a “report” describing sweepstakes opportunities, or what the PAO report described as “a trinket of minimal value.” Any respondents were “inundated” with additional mailers in the hopes of extracting more money. But none of the victims were ever paid the prize that was promised.
In 2018, the USPIS executed multiple search warrants and the Department of Justice (DOJ) obtained a court order to shut down Trickle’s fraudulent operations.
“The Department of Justice’s
Consumer Protection Branch is committed to protecting elderly consumers
from fraudulent mass-mailing schemes,” said Acting Assistant Attorney
General Yaakov Roth of the Justice Department’s Civil Division,
according to the PAO press release. “We are grateful to the Postal
Inspection Service for their thorough investigation in this matter.”
Full Article & Source:
Eighty-year-old Nevada woman pleads guilty to role in fake lottery scam that defrauded ‘vulnerable’ community members of more than $15 million over 6 years

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