Accident Reconstruction Lexington Doctor Involved in DUI Crash

A Lexington doctor charged in a wrong-way crash DUI crash along Man O’ War Boulevard Monday morning had a not guilty plea entered in the case by her attorney Tuesday afternoon in Fayette District Court.

Officers arrested Dr. Briana Lynn Boyd, 39, after she crashed her car into an oncoming pickup truck around 5 a.m. The driver and a passenger in the truck were both taken to the hospital for treatment. Boyd was not injured.

http://liarcatchers.com/accident_reconstruction.html

Boyd, an ER doctor who is contracted to fill in ER shifts in Knox County through an Dallas agency, is due back in court for a preliminary hearing in January. As of now, her shifts are being filled by another doctor.

Boyd is charged with DUI and two counts of assault in the case.

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Fraud Investigation Woman Charged in Laurel County Prescription Scam

Deputies in Laurel County arrested two woman and charged them with forging prescriptions for pills.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

Officials say Katrina Dixon, 35, and Ashley Coffey, 25, used their positions at a local dentist office to pull off the scam. They forged prescriptions for patients without their knowledge and pocketed hydrocodone pills.

Deputies charged the duo with unauthorized procurement of a controlled substance.

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Accident Reconstruction 1 Teen Killed in Jessamine County Accident

Officials say the two teens injured in a Jessamine County accident that took the life of a third teen early Tuesday morning are expected to be OK.

Jessamine County Sheriff’s Office officials say Taylor E. Corman, 18, was driving a Jeep northbound along KY-29 when he lost control of the vehicle and overcorrected. The Jeep went airborne and slammed into a tree. Impact marks were visible nearly six feet up the trunk.

http://liarcatchers.com/accident_reconstruction.html

Corman was pronounced dead at the scene.

EMS took Christopher Gumm, 19, and Emilee E. Gosser, 18, to UK Hospital for treatment. Gumm was treated and released, and Gosser was last reported in fair condition.

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Insurance Fraud Bryan, TX Chiropractor and Others Charged

A 31-count sealed indictment has been returned against an area chiropractor and four others alleging conspiracy and mail fraud in a scheme to defraud auto insurance companies such as Farmers, USAA, State Farm and AIG of more than $3 million, United States Attorney Kenneth Magidson announced today.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

The indictment, returned under seal Nov. 28, 2012, was unsealed today following the arrests of Chase Lindsey, 44, Earlie Dickerson, 50, Marion Young, 52, Edward Graham, 46, and Brittany Jessie, 23. Lindsey is a chiropractor and part-owner of Lindsey Chiropractic Care in Bryan. Dickerson was the office manager of the Bryan office of Sanjoh & Associates Law Firm as well as part-owner of several chiropractic clinics he owned with co-defendants Young, Graham and Jessie in Bryan. Lindsey and Young appeared today in Houston before U.S. Magistrate Judge George C. Hanks Jr., while Graham is expected to appear before Judge Hanks tomorrow. Dickerson and Jessie appeared before a before U.S. Magistrate Judge in Waco today. Lindsey was released upon posting a $75,000 bond. Young was ordered to remain in custody pending a detention hearing scheduled for Wednesday morning.

According to allegations in the indictment, from February 2007 through December 2009, Dickerson used his position at Sanjoh and Associates to recruit individuals involved in auto accidents to be represented by the Sanjoh Law Firm. Dickerson also co-owned three chiropractic clinics in Bryan with Young, Graham, and Jessie: Texas Avenue Chiropractic Clinic, H&E Chiropractic Care and Private Chiropractic Care. Dickerson would send the individuals he recruited to these three clinics and one clinic owned by Lindsey. Lindsey was the chiropractor at all four clinics.

The indictment alleges Lindsey would routinely recommend medically unnecessary therapeutic treatments for the Sanjoh clients sent by Dickerson in return for approximately $2,000 per month, usually in cash. Lindsey also allowed false and fraudulent chiropractic clinic bills under his name from Texas Avenue Chiropractic Clinic, H&E Chiropractic Clinic, Private Chiropractic Care and Lindsey Chiropractic Care to be submitted by the Sanjoh law firm to various auto insurance companies. Jessie first prepared the fraudulent chiropractic bills, then prepared and sent settlement demand letters based on the fraudulent bills to the various auto insurance companies. The insurance companies paid the Sanjoh and Associates Law Firm and its clients more than $1.5 million based on the fraudulent claims.

Upon conviction, the conspiracy count carries a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and a $250,000 fine. Each of the 30 mail fraud counts carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in a federal prison and a $250,000 fine.

The criminal charges are the result of a joint investigation by agents of the FBI and the National Insurance Crime Bureau. This case will be prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Al Balboni.

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Insurance Fraud Spider-Man Director Sues Insurance Agent

Spider-Man director Sam Raimi filed a lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court against his longtime insurance agent, claiming fraud.

The suit claims Jerry Goldman, of Goldman Insurance Company, overcharged Raimi more than $72,000, including undisclosed fees in addition to customary broker commissions.

Goldman provided homeowners and personal liability coverage to Raimi, according to the suit.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

Raimi also claims he discovered other breaches of conduct, including withholding or failing to refund unearned premiums, commissions and fees from canceled policies.

Rami directed the first three movies in the Spider-Man franchise.

Goldman was arrested by the FBI on charges he bilked clients – including actor Tom Hanks and Police drummer Andy Summers – out of more than $800,000, according to reports.

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Identity Theft Bellingham Thief Pleads Guilty; Gets 2 Years

BELLINGHAM – A Bellingham man convicted of stealing mail and identities was sentenced last week to two years behind bars and another two years on probation.

Frankie Mazzei, 28, pleaded guilty after a search warrant uncovered at least 113 pieces of stolen mail at his home in the 2400 block of McKenzie Avenue, according to charging documents. Among the stolen items, officers found credit cards, a photocopy of a man’s driver’s license, a vehicle registration, personal checks and a check belonging to a local Montessori school.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Two of Mazzei’s associates – his newlywed wife, Trisha Mazzei, 26, and friend William Jay Hagen, 33 – were arrested in November as the investigation unfolded.

Hagen is accused of stealing a $4,400 check mailed from Alaska to Bellingham. The victim has an almost identical last name. The check was cashed into Hagen’s account, according to charging documents. The search of the Mazzei residence at 2482 McKenzie uncovered paperwork from a First National Bank of Alaska account, the same one as the stolen check.

On Sept. 27, a Bellingham couple came to police with a letter they received from Citibank. The letter thanked them for opening a credit card account with a $3,000 limit, an account they never opened.

Police obtained a search warrant for Trisha Mazzei’s Yahoo email account and found she had applied for a credit card account under the victim’s name a few months earlier, according to charges filed in a separate case.

The search warrant also confirmed another woman’s report: The victim discovered someone had changed her address to the Mazzeis’ residence, then made 38 charges on her credit card in the summer, prosecutors allege. About $1,550 had been spent at local stores and on mail orders.

A business called “Trisha Daycare” listed its address at Trisha and Frankie’s residence.

Trisha Mazzei’s maiden name is Macmillan. She and Hagen are awaiting their trial dates.

Frankie Mazzei now has 14 felonies on his record: five counts of identity theft as well as financial fraud, bail jumping, unlawful possession of a firearm, forgery, taking a motor vehicle without permission, second-degree burglary, second-degree possession of stolen property and two counts of first-degree theft. Four of those he racked up as a juvenile.

On a probation report filed just before his sentencing, Mazzei said that within the past year he has used methadone, heroin, methamphetamine and Ecstasy on a daily basis.

Whatcom County Superior Court Judge Chuck Snyder ordered him to serve a drug offender sentencing alternative: 25 months in prison, 25 months out, if he stays away from drugs and alcohol.

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Private Detective 2 Blackburn Escapees Captured

One of the men who escaped from the Blackburn Correctional Complex over the weekend says he did it to get home to his sick mother for Christmas.

Christopher Melton and Tyler Roberts walked away from the minimum security prison in Lexington on Saturday night.

“Got nothing to say to you, buddy. Might as well leave [the camera] off,” Tyler Roberts told LEX 18 as he was escorted Monday morning into the Lincoln County Jail.

http://liarcatchers.com/index.php

While Roberts had few words for LEX 18, his alleged partner in crime, Christopher Melton was a different story.

“I was hoping to be on the run at least until after Christmas,” Melton said. “Chicks dig it, too. It’s weird. When a guy’s on the run, they all want you for some reason.”

From behind bars, Melton admits he hopped the fence at Blackburn on Saturday night: “I was gonna try to get home for Christmas… I knew what the penalties were whenever I crossed that fence. That’s the chance I was willing to take to get home for Christmas before my mother died. She’s all I got.”

Melton was arrested late Sunday in Garrard County. Sheriff’s deputies said they pulled over a stolen truck with both escapees inside. Roberts got away.

In the truck, police said, they found prison-issued boots and clothing, along with a pick axe. The getaway vehicle was apparently taken from a home near Blackburn.

“We got as far away from Blackburn as we could. There wasn’t no attempted home invasion or none of that. We was gone,” Melton said.

Hours after Melton’s arrest, there was a short chase and Roberts was also caught around 11 a.m. in the same area of Garrard County.

“Well, mom, I love you. Tried to get home for Christmas. Couldn’t make it,” said Melton.

Melton was originally in jail for theft, while Roberts had been charged with burglary and arson.

The two do not face any charges in Garrard County. They will be taken to the Fayette County Jail.

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Wrongful Death Man Found in Stuffed in Freezer in Kokomo, Ind.

Police in Kokomo arrested a man after finding the body of a missing man stuffed inside a freezer.

The investigation began Saturday after a mother called the Kokomo Police Department saying that she hadn’t heard from her son, 29-year-old Alex C. Shipp, since November 8.

While investigating, officers heard that someone had last seen Shipp at a home at 804 Elm St. When officers went in the home, they found the body of a deceased person inside a freezer in the basement. Fox59 has learned that the body was badly decomposed because the freezer was not turned on.

http://liarcatchers.com/wrongful_death.html

An autopsy Monday confirmed the identity of the deceased as Shipp, police said. The coroner has not ruled on the cause of death.

Police arrested Walter L. Logan, 51, on a murder charge and took him to the Howard County Criminal Justice Center. He’s due in court Wednesday morning for an initial hearing.

Anyone with information about the case should call Detective Michael Banush at 765-456-7278, or the Kokomo Police Hotline at 765-456-7017.

You may qualify for a cash reward by calling Central Indiana Crime Stoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS with your anonymous tip.

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Private Detective 2 Plead Guilty in Plot to Export Aircraft to Iran

LOUISVILLE, KY—Two men pleaded guilty today to charges related to the unlawful export of aircraft and aircraft parts from the United States to Iran, announced David J. Hale, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky; Lisa Monaco, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; and Perrye Turner, Special Agent in Charge, FBI Louisville Division.

One of the defendants, Hamid Asefi, 68, is a citizen and resident of the Republic of Iran. The other, Behzad Karimian, also known as Tony Karimian, 53, is a U.S. citizen living in Louisville who holds a valid Iranian passport and is employed as a Mesaba Airlines pilot. The guilty pleas were entered today in Louisville before Magistrate Judge James D. Moyer. The two-count indictment was returned by a federal grand jury in Louisville on August 2, 2012, and was unsealed before the hearing today.

http://liarcatchers.com/index.php

Asefi and Karimian were both charged with conspiracy to violate and violating the International Emergency Economic Powers Act for exporting, selling or causing the export or sale of aircraft and aircraft parts without first having obtained the required license from the U.S. Department of Treasury. Asefi made his initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Louisville on June 1, 2012. Karimian was arrested and made his initial appearance in U.S. District Court in Louisville on June 6, 2012.

Asefi is the principal officer of Aster Corp Ltd., an Iranian company with offices in both Iran and the United Kingdom. The indictment charges that, beginning as early as August 2007 and continuing through April 2011, Asefi used the U.K. office of Aster to serve as a transshipment point to facilitate shipment of goods from the United States to Iran and that Asefi used Aster to facilitate the shipment of goods from the United States to Iran through third party countries. The indictment further charges that Asefi sent requests on behalf of Iranian entities to Karimian for purchases of aircraft and aircraft parts located in the United States or owned by U.S. persons; and that Karimian knowingly and willfully made inquiries, placed orders, and attempted to facilitate the purchase of aircraft and aircraft parts located in the United States and owned by U.S. persons on behalf of Asefi and persons in Iran.

The indictment also asserts that Asefi and Karimian acted with knowledge and intent to violate the Iran embargo when on September 27, 2007, Asefi sent an e-mail to Karimian regarding Karimian’s interest in establishing a “profitable business collaboration” for the purpose of procuring aircraft and aircraft components for end-users in Iran. The indictment further alleges that on or about October 1, 2009, Asefi sent an e-mail to Karimian which outlined the terms of delivery and payment on future transactions with Iran Air and stated, “…remember that, only U.S. Embargo has brought this chance and benefit to us, to get involved in these deals….”

According to count two of the indictment, beginning in September 2009 and continuing through April 2010, Asefi and Karimian violated the embargo against Iran by exporting and causing the export of services related to the sale of a G.E. Aircraft Engine Model CF6-50C2, as well as the procurement of helicopters manufactured by Bell Helicopter, from the United States to Iran, without first having obtained the required authorizations from the U.S. Department of Treasury. All of the aircraft and aircraft parts involved in this case were intended for civilian use.

“The investigation and prosecution of national security cases is the top priority of the Department of Justice and my office,” said U.S. Attorney Hale. “We view the circumvention of Iranian export control laws as a very serious matter. The FBI should be commended for its excellent work in disrupting this international scheme and bringing these men to justice.”

The International Emergency Economic Powers Act authorizes the President to impose economic sanctions on a foreign country when the President declares a national emergency with respect to a national security threat. On March 15, 1995, the president issued an executive order declaring the actions and policies of the government of Iran constituted a national emergency. On May 6, 1995, the president issued an executive order imposing the Iran trade embargo. On June 23, 2011, the U.S. Department of the Treasury imposed sanctions on Iran Air after designating it as a proliferator of weapons of mass destruction for providing material support and services to Iran’s Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps.

At sentencing, Asefi and Karimian face a maximum sentence of 40 years in prison, a fine of $500,000, and a three-year period of supervised release on each count. Sentencing is scheduled before Chief District Judge Joseph H. McKinley, Jr. on March 4, 2013 at 2 p.m. in Louisville.

This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Bryan Calhoun of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Western District of Kentucky, and Trial Attorney Casey Arrowood of the Counterespionage Section of the Justice Department’s National Security Division. The case was investigated by the FBI.

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Identity Theft KY AG Warns Against Holiday Scams

With the holiday shopping season underway, Attorney General Jack Conway urges Kentucky consumers to be wary of seasonal scams and identity theft.

A record number of consumers are turning to their smart phones, tablets and computers for their holiday shopping needs, which has scammers working overtime to develop fraudulent emails and text messages to gain access to your personal information and your identity.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

“Shoppers should be leery of text messages or pop-up ads offering products such as iPads or gift cards for free or at heavily discounted rates,” General Conway said. “These offers, or phishing scams, can contain a potential virus or malware that detects personal information such as usernames, passwords or even credit card details. Remember, if it sounds too good to be true, it probably is.”

General Conway’s Office of Consumer Protection has seen an increase in complaints related to fraudulent text messages. Some appear to come from a reputable store, while others involve sweepstakes. The text messages may indicate that consumers have won a sweepstakes or a shopping spree for purchases in a particular store. They are asked to call a number for details or respond to the text. Consumers should not respond, as it only confirms for the scammer that the cell phone numbers are valid and they may attempt to use enticements to obtain personal information from the consumer.

Additionally, consumers need to be careful of malicious mobile apps designed to steal information from smartphones or distribute expensive text messages without a user’s consent. Malicious apps are usually offered for free and involve some type of fun application or game.

Beware of Seasonal Phishing Scams
Seasonal phishing scams often come disguised as requests for charitable contributions, electronic greeting cards, online shopping advertisements or credit card applications. More sophisticated scammers have even mimicked an electronic shipping update notice from companies like UPS or Amazon.com.

“These fraudulent emails can contain viruses or direct consumers to legitimate-looking websites where they are asked to provide personal and financial information to scam artists,” General Conway said. “Consumers who fall victim to phishing or malware scams risk having their finances compromised, identities stolen and jeopardized safety.”

Tips for safe online shopping:

• Only do business with companies you know and trust and that offer secure payment processing. Look for websites that start with https, (the “s” stands for secure).
• To protect yourself against these seasonal phishing scams, verify the communication by calling the company or by logging into your account directly from the business’ website.
• Never do business with someone who insists that you wire money.
• Using credit cards while shopping online can offer extra protection. Consider designating one credit card with a lower credit limit for online purchases.
• Keep personal information private. Don’t disclose your address, phone number, Social Security number or bank account information to a stranger.
• Never respond to emails or pop-up ads that ask for your personal or financial information.
• Avoid storing credit card information online.

Gift Cards
When buying a gift card, only buy from reputable sources that you know and trust. It is also wise to give the recipient the terms and conditions point of sale material, as well as the receipt confirming the amount purchased on the card. Additionally, consumers should avoid buying gift cards from online auction or “for sale” listing sites, as they can be counterfeit.

If you are the victim of a consumer scam, help is available by contacting the Office of the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Hotline at 1-888-432-9257 or by visiting ag.ky.gov/civil/consumerprotection. An identity theft packet is also available.

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