Fraud Investigation Man Poses as Eye Doctor

A 73-year-old man charged with insurance fraud faces up to 11 years behind bars if convicted of working as an unlicensed eye doctor at a small shop in San Jose.

Prosecutors said Valery Dobrushin, of San Francisco, was illegally giving eye examinations and prescribing eyeglasses to customers of Val’s Optical, and billing insurance companies for some of the services rendered.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

The joint investigation by the Santa Clara County District Attorney’s Office and the California Department of Consumer Affairs led to five felony charges and two misdemeanors.

The felonies are related to insurance fraud — prosecutors said that Dobrushin administered more than 300 illegal eye exams between January 2009 and January 2012, billing insurance companies for more than $11,300.

The misdemeanors involve giving the exams and prescribing the eyeglasses.

“Licensed optometrists and ophthalmologists are the only people qualified to examine your eyes and make prescriptions,” wrote insurance fraud prosecutor Christopher Kwok in a news release. “The defendant seems to have believed that he was somehow exempt from the law and risked the eyesight of hundreds of trusting people.”

If convicted, he would also would be ordered to pay full restitution.

Dobrushin is an optician, which means he is legally limited to analyzing and interpreting eye prescriptions and determining the best lenses for a person’s needs.

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Pedophile Tracking Pedophile Ring Busted 7 Charged

Washington, Jun 7 (Prensa Latina) U.S. authorities charged seven men and are investigating 20 others for belonging to an international network that produces and distributes photographs and movies with pedophile content on the Internet.

US Assistant Attorney General Larry Breuer said the defendants face various charges related to the possession and sale of obscene images and videos of children between two months and five years old.

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

The police arrested the seven individuals in the city of Indianapolis and the 20 other suspects in nine states as part of Operation Bulldog, launched in November 2010 to fight this scourge.

Breuer said the government is also investigating possible gang members in countries like: Sweden, Holland, the UK and Serbia.

According to the latest report from the international children’s defense group Telefono Arcobaleno, based in Italy, the United States and Europe are the main producers, suppliers and consumers of child pornography on the net.

Data collected by the group in 2011 showed an increasing presence of child pornography on social networks like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube, with 73 percent coming from Europe and 23 percent from the United States.

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Fraud Investigation Fraud RIng Busted in NM Creating Docs for Illegals

Authorities in New Mexico said they busted of a fraud ring that allegedly forged false documents for undocumented immigrants who wanted to obtain a driver’s license.

We know without a shadow of a doubt there are several other rings operating right now in the state, and the only reason they continue to operate is because it’s a profitable business they’re in.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

Rental agreements, bank statements, vehicle titles, and insurance paperwork were among the fake documents provided by the ring. In at least 54 cases, these documents were used to obtain licenses, police said.

The probe is continuing, and authorities said during a news conference that investigators believe hundreds of licenses have been fraudulently obtained through the ring over the past couple of years for undocumented immigrants living outside of New Mexico.

Arrest warrants were issued for nine people.

“We know without a shadow of a doubt there are several other rings operating right now in the state, and the only reason they continue to operate is because it’s a profitable business they’re in,” said Demesia Padilla, secretary of the state Taxation and Revenue Department, which oversees New Mexico’s Motor Vehicle Division.

Padilla said her concern is that the stories about vanloads of undocumented immigrants being brought to New Mexico from as far as Florida and Illinois for driver’s licenses will continue until the state Legislature takes action.

New Mexico and Washington are the only states that allow undocumented immigrants to obtain the same driver’s license as a U.S. citizen.

Padilla charged that the Legislature has created a “mess” by not repealing the law.

“We need to end the issuance of driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants, and until we do that, we’re going to leave ourselves open to this type of fraud and this type of crime,” she said.

Republican Gov. Susana Martinez has repeatedly pressed state lawmakers to repeal New Mexico’s law over fraud concerns. During this year’s session, the state Senate passed a bill that would have made it harder for undocumented immigrants to obtain state driver’s licenses. Yet, the bill did not get a vote in the House.

“This fraud ring only confirms what New Mexicans already know – the only way to put an end to this criminal activity is to repeal the law that gives driver’s licenses to illegal immigrants,” the governor said in a statement issued Wednesday.

A criminal complaint details the ring that authorities say was operating in the eastern New Mexico communities of Clovis and Portales. Those named in the complaint face dozens of charges ranging from forgery to conspiracy to commit altered, forged or fictitious licenses.

Of the nine warrants issued, two people have been arrested and two others have agreed to turn themselves in.

The alleged ring leader, Luis Raul Collazo-Medrano, his wife, Olivia Esther Campos, their daughter Viridiana Campos and two others have yet to be located.

The investigation began eight months ago after several foreign nationals were found to be using the same phone numbers in Roosevelt County to make appointments at the Motor Vehicle Division office. Several applicants also were using the same addresses in Clovis and Portales as their places of residence, even though they did not live there.

It was a phone call from a Brazilian woman living in Georgia inquiring about her license that unearthed the scam, Ninth Judicial District Attorney Matt Chandler said.

The woman told authorities she agreed to pay Collazo-Medrano $4,000 for a driver’s license. The scam involved her flying to Amarillo, Texas, and being driven to Portales, where her paperwork was prepared.

A hold was put on the license due to fraud suspicions. The woman demanded her money back, and Collazo-Medrano allegedly told her that he didn’t need her money since he was making $30,000 a month getting fraudulent licenses for others.

“By all means, this is not a case of overcharging or overreaching by law enforcement,” Chandler said. “In reality, what we were able to determine is there were hundreds and hundreds” of applicants that went through the system as a result of the scam.

Chandler said the investigation is focused on those running the rings, not the individuals applying for licenses.

State officials said they are working to revoke the 54 licenses that were connected to the busted ring.

About 92,000 foreign national licenses have been issued in New Mexico since 2003. Out of those, only 16,000 license holders filed a return this tax season, Padilla said.

“Where are the rest of them? It appears they’re not in New Mexico, as is evident by this ring,” she said.

Each time the state has tried to prevent fraud through administrative measures like requiring in-person appointments or tracking addresses and phone numbers of applicants, Padilla said the rings have become more creative in finding ways around the system.

“Absolutely it’s given us a bad name,” she said. “We’re known as the place where they can come to shop for a driver’s license. There are advertisements in Chicago, New York, New Jersey and North Carolina where they basically say there’s a commodity for sale in New Mexico, and that commodity is a New Mexico driver’s license.”

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Private Investigator Paris High School Teacher Indicted on Sexual Abuse Charges

A Paris high school teacher and coach has been indicted on sexual abuse charges. The alleged victim was one of his students, according to the superintendent. Some parents in the area are outraged, others question the accusations.

Outside Paris Independent High, “pride” banners line the street. But recent allegations surrounding the gym teacher and coach have brought shame to its message.

“I wouldn’t want my kids to go through nothin’ like that,” says parent, Linda Cordray.

http://liarcatchers.com/index.php

The superintendent confirms to LEX 18, Jason Earlywine has been indicted on sexual abuse in the first degree. He won’t elaborate on what happened, but says there was an incident between Earlywine and one of his students back in January 2011.

“I know this person that you’re talking about, and I know his family, and I’d like to think in all actuality that none of the allegations are true,” says Linda Wilson who’s had two kids in the high school.

The superintendent says the victim didn’t come forward with her story until November. When it was reported, Earlywine was immediately suspended without pay.

“It’s really sickening for a teacher to do that,” Cordray says.

Earlywine also works at Paris Middle School. He’s been the head coach of both girls and boys tennis since 2007 and has worked with the varsity basketball team since 2006.

School officials assure parents they are continuing to investigate.

“Ultimately the safety and protection and well being of our students is what should be at the forefront of every parent, every school board member, everyone in the Paris community, in every community,” Wilson says.

LEX 18 couldn’t reach police for comment on the investigation. We reached out to Earlywine for his side of the story, but didn’t hear back.

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Identity Theft Experts Offer Advice

With identity theft and online security breaches on the rise, Don Sorensen, CEO and founder of online reputation management firm Big Blue Robot, today posted guidelines for individuals and companies interested in protecting their identity and personal reputation online.

Personal identification is a standard in today’s society. Typically it is in the form of a driver’s license, a credit or debit card, library card, or any other number of cards that display an individual’s name and possibly an image. However, with the advent of the Internet, personal identification has become vulnerable at many levels.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Every year, an estimated 9 million U.S. residents are victims of identity theft, according to statistics compiled for 2010 and documented by Javelin Strategy and Research, the Federal Trade Commission and the IRS.

Identify theft is rampant and the sophistication level of professional identity thieves continues to grow, along with the methods they develop. From phising scams to hacking of corporate databases, there is an ever-increasing threat to online identities.

“It’s so easy for anyone to hide their identity online, or assume the identity of someone else,” says Sorensen. “It is imperative for individuals and companies to claim their name online in as many forms as possible, in order to prevent fraudulent use of your name. Or, from a more pragmatic approach, to prevent a rival company from claiming your domains and profiles.”

Claim personalized domains
Sorensen first advises individuals and companies to claim personalized domains. “Not only do you need to own yourcompany.com, but also other domain extensions, like yourcompany.net, .org, .tv, and more,” added Sorensen. “Owning these various domains will keep others from buying them up and hijacking your corporate brands. It will also have the benefit of allowing you to create microsites or informational sites about yourself and your company that can appear in the SERPs and push down more negative links.”

For individuals, Sorensen suggests securing firstnamelastname.com domain—if it isn’t already taken—and then consider buying other extensions as well. These domains can be used as blogs or as a hub for your identity online.

Register branded social profiles
Sorensen points out that social profiles tend to do very well for both company and individual name searches and can bump negative content out of the search results. However, more importantly, individuals want to protect their online reputation by making sure someone else doesn’t claim these profiles and use them for their own purposes.

In fact, just last year, a prankster registered the profile @MayorEmanuel on Twitter and commenced to tweet as if from behind the scenes of Chicago Mayor Rham Emanuel’s election campaign. The profile gained a number of followers who thought they were following the real Rham Emanuel, only to find out it was a hoax.

“Claim all your branded social media profiles immediately, so something similar doesn’t happen to you or your company. Using a website like http://www.knowem.com can simplify this process.” advises Sorensen.

Monitor your Wikipedia page
Although Wikipedia has in some instances been proven more accurate than the Encyclopedia Britannica, it’s still an online playground rife with fraud and misinformation. “If you don’t have a Wikipedia page for your company (or if you are famous enough to warrant a personal Wikipedia entry) go ahead and create one before anyone else has the chance to do it for you,” suggests Sorensen. “However, keep an eye on it. Because Wikipedia is an open community, any editor can change the information on your profile. If this happens, make sure you correct the information quickly and alert the Wikipedia editorial board if malicious acts are being perpetrated against your page by other users.”

Grab business listings
Sorensen then recommends claiming your company name on business listing websites and searching local and niche directories for instances of your business or personal name. Sorensen then suggests creating listings that reflect your actual information, pointing out that they can be great places to link to a company website, blog, or other web property and rank better in the SERPs.

Don’t forget variations
“Lastly, don’t forget about variations of your business or personal name,” comments Sorensen. “For example, if you are a car blogger, purchase domains like yournamecars.com or yournameautoparts.com. For social profiles, think about various ways you could be represented online, like “@MayorEmanuel,” so that you can avoid unnecessary confusion over fake profiles. It’s also a good idea to hold on to common misspellings of your personal or company name to avoid potential problems as well. You can even use those misspelled domains as redirects to your main site, so you can capture anyone who is looking for you online.”

Although there are many aspects to reputation management that will keep your SERPs looking good, companies and individuals can avoid potential disasters by claiming any and all instances of company or personal name online before anyone else does.

Mr. Sorensen has merged his 25 years of public relations and marketing experience with SEO expertise to improve and manage the online reputation of public and private companies and corporate executives. Sorensen’s complete post can be found here.

About Big Blue Robot
Founded in 2003, Big Blue Robot (BBR), http://www.bigbluerobot.com, helps corporations and high profile individuals improve their online reputations through search engine optimization of positive web content. BBR has developed state-of-the-art online reputation management strategies for companies doing business around the world, including Germany, Canada, New Zealand, United Kingdom, United Arab Emirates, and France. Sorensen has been featured in The New York Times and other publications on the subject of reputation management and is now educating, individuals and corporation on defining and executing online reputation management strategies.

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Identity Theft Survey Shows Consumers Risking ID Theft

A new survey conducted by a credit card comparison Web site indicates consumers continue to be lax when it comes to guarding against identity theft.

Users may not be able to prevent leaks such as today’s disclosure of 6.5 million stolen LinkedIn passwords, but they are still engaging in their own risky behavior online, according to results from 510 consumers who responded to a 13-question CreditDonkey.com online survey conducted May 21 through 24.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

A third admitted to sharing their password with a friend and to using the same password for multiple sites. Nearly 25 percent also said they add Facebook “friends” they don’t know.

 

Thirteen percent said they’ve been the victim of ID theft.

“Given how promiscuous people are about their passwords online, I’m surprised the number of victims isn’t higher,” Charles Tran, founder of CreditDonkey.com, said in an e-mail. “Of course, with all the Web sites that now ask for user registration, it’s hard to blame somebody for wanting to use the same password for multiple Web sites.”

Because the Pasadena-based site helps people manage credit, many of the survey questions focused on how well consumers understood the impact identity theft can have on future borrowing capabilities.

Among the encouraging results:

71.8 percent knew that losing a Social Security card was potentially far more harmful than losing a credit card or driver’s license
65.5 percent understood that a credit freeze prevents new accounts from being opened in their name
76.3 percent knew to check their credit report to find out if someone has opened a new line of credit in their name
Only 18 percent thought a credit freeze or fraud alert prevented them from accessing their own credit reports

“In reality, identity theft can strike any of us, and just like you shouldn’t leave your front door unlocked, you should take basic precautions to protect yourself,” Tran said.

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Fraud Investigation Lee County School District

FORT MYERS, Fla.- Everlena Smith has been added to the growing list of arrests in connection with the Lee County School District check fraud scandal. The 24-year-old was arrested Tuesday, while at least 15 have already been arrested for the same crime.

Smith faces charges of theft and passing a counterfeit check after allegedly cashing a counterfeit Lee County School District payroll check at a local Walmart.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

The investigation began in April when it was revealed that several subjects uttered counterfeit checks at various businesses in Lee County using the school district’s payroll bank account number.

After obtaining certified copies of the counterfeit checks, it was determined that the checks were similar to the School District’s authentic checks, although the names on the counterfeit checks were not names of Lee County School District employees.

As in the previous arrests, the suspects were identified through video surveillance and used their real identities on the counterfeit checks.

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Identity Theft Marta Zuniga – Garcia Arrested

WAELDER — An area woman has been captured by the Waelder Police Department and is now facing charges of identity theft.
Waelder Police Chief Jim Taylor reported that his department arrested Marta Zuniga-Garcia, 26 of Waelder, Tuesday night for fraudulent use or possession of identifying information. The crime is a State Jail felony.
Zuniga-Garcia, who is alleged to have used another person’s identity for several months in order to gain employment at a local plant, was released from the Gonzales County Jail after posting a $1,000 cash bond.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html
Taylor reported another arrest in connection with a fight that took place last week at the Waelder City Park.
Myron Williams, 20 of Waelder, was arrested and charged with assault causing bodily injury. He is still in custody in lieu of a $2,000 bond.
The Waelder Police have also issued an arrest warrant for Francisco Alvarado of Waelder.
The warrant alleges Alvarado committed at least one act of indecency with a child through sexual contact. He was arrested a month ago for sexual assault of a child and is out after being released from jail on a $75,000 surety bond.
Taylor said the cases involve two different female victims.

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Insurance Fraud Restaurant Owner Eva Christian

DAYTON — Prosecutors say Dayton restaurant owner Eva Christian faces deportation following her release from the nine-year prison sentence handed down Wednesday by Montgomery County Common Pleas Judge Barbara P. Gorman.

Christian has owned and operated Boulevard Haus (formerly Cafe Boulevard) in Dayton’s Oregon District for 15 years.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

In court Wednesday morning, she made two emotional pleas to Gorman: first for leniency and a sentence of probation; and second, for an appeals bond that would allow her to remain free while her convictions are appealed.

The judge rejected both, calling Christian “a dangerous person” and told the restaurant owner, “I don’t think you have a conscience.”

When Christian told the judge “Please, I am not a flight risk, I will not leave,” the judge responded, “I don’t think you know the difference between the truth and a lie. So I do believe you are a flight risk.”

Prosecutors had said Christian faced a maximum of 17 years in prison after a jury convicted her May 22 on five felony counts — including a first-degree felony count of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity — related to two incidents of insurance fraud.

The case revolved around break-ins and a fire during 2009 that Christian reported and which prosecutors said were staged in order to collect insurance money: one break-in at her Washington Twp. home and a reported vandalism and fire at her now-defunct Cena Brazilian Steakhouse in Miami Twp. near the Dayton Mall. Testimony during the two-week trial included a prosecution witness who testified that Christian wanted to “blow up” Cena, which was adjacent to a family-portrait studio and men’s clothing store near the Dayton Mall in Miami Twp.

“These offenses may sound non violent, but your plan could have hurt a lot of people,” Gorman said. “You conspired with someone to blow up your unsuccessful restaurant.”

The judge made no mention of deportation during sentencing, but Assistant Montgomery County Prosecutor Mary Montgomery said under current immigration rules, “When she’s released, she’ll be deported.” Christian was born in Croatia and raised in Germany, and has German citizenship. She is considered a “permanent resident” of the U.S. after marrying an American citizen, but conviction of the first-degree felony count of engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity leads to automatic deportation for non citizens, Montgomery said.

The restaurant owner also was convicted of four lower-level felonies — two counts of insurance fraud and two counts of making false alarms — in connection with the reported break-ins and subsequent restaurant fire. Gorman said Christian will be required by law to sell her Washington Twp. home to help pay restitution to the two insurance companies she defrauded, and to help pay for the investigations that led to her conviction.

The impact of Wednesday’s sentencing on the Boulevard Haus remains unclear, although Donald Stamper, an employee who answered the restaurant’s phone during lunch service Wednesday, said the restaurant is operating as usual. “We’re definitely going to stay open,” Stamper said. “Our entire staff has pulled together as a team.”

Christian said in her plea for leniency that Boulevard Haus employees depend on her for their livelihood, and said her adult son “needs me.” She remained defiant about the jury’s decision to convict her, saying she “cannot confess to a crime I have not committed.” During the trial, she testified and denied wrongdoing.

But prosecutors presented testimony from police, fire and insurance company investigators and from witness Diane Jones, who testified that she and her husband were part of a scheme developed by Christian to stage both break-ins.

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Identity Theft Most Popular Consumer Complaint

RoadFish.com men’s lifestyle and finance magazine today commented on the number one consumer complaint of 2011, which according to the Federal Trade Commission, was identity theft. The FTC reported that it received over 1.8 million complaints from consumers in 2011, and of those, 15% were regarding some degree of identity theft. RoadFish.com not only can identify with these folks, as it has personal experience with such a grievance, but it encourages consumers to be smart and protect their identity through checking their financial accounts, keeping a close tab on their credit report, and shredding all financial documents.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Lucy Lazarony of Fox Business reported that according to the FTC, identity theft has topped the list of consumer complaints for 12 years in a row now. She reports that of the nearly 270,000 complaints of identity theft in the past year, nearly a quarter of them were tax or wage-related fraud. David Torok, the Director of the Division of Planning and Information at the FTC, is quoted as saying, “It’s a quite frightening type of identity theft.” Torok states that an identity thief must use a victim’s personal information and Social Security number, very private and personal data about a person. In the event that the fraud uses this information to become employed, the victim receives his or her tax obligations, which are normally discovered around tax season. Torok stated, “People discover it as they file their taxes. There’s a real spike this time of year.” He also states that another scary situation is where a thief might file a tax return under another person’s name in order to steal that person’s tax refund.

RoadFish.com can empathize with the large number of people who have fallen victim to identity thieves in one way or another. RoadFish.com’s Senior staff writer is quoted as saying, “It is scary how many people are out there trying to scam on others’ identities. I’ve personally had my credit card numbers stolen twice in the past couple of years, and I honestly have no idea how the thieves got the numbers. Must be some new technology or something. But seriously, it’s crazy how sneakily these things can happen. Both times, I had the credit cards securely in my wallet, at the times that the purchases were made. My banks were really helpful, but it’s still a time-consuming process that I would rather not have to go through ever again.”

According to IdentityGuard.com, penalties for identity thieves range from state to state, and also vary depending on the circumstances of the crime. Punishment can be as minimal as a small fine or a misdemeanor charge, to jail time and extravagant fines. But typically, the course of action for penalizing an identity thief—assuming that the thief is caught—is making him or her responsible for repaying the victim for the monetary loss brought about by the crime. They could be hit with an additional fine on top of the repayment penalty, going as high as $100,000 in fees.

RoadFish.com gives some advice to people who are looking to protect themselves from future identity theft. RoadFish.com’s Senior staff writer is quoted as saying, “Based on all of my research and professional advice, it’s a good idea to destroy your paper chain. That is, shred bills and bank statements, even those pre-approved credit cards you get in the mail, and chuck your receipts at home instead of at a store. You should also keep close tabs on your credit history to see if anyone is messing with it. Check your bank statement weekly, which is really easy now that most banks provide online banking, and check your credit report often. Another good tip is to make your passwords really ambiguous so no one but you can get into your online financial accounts. Oh, and never carry your Social Security card around with you! Keep it in a safe, preferably locked, place at home.”

The other top five categories that the FTC listed as topping the charts of consumer complaints in 2011 included debt collection calls, banks and other lending institutions, auto sales, and advance free loans.

About RoadFish.com

RoadFish.com is an online men’s lifestyle and finance magazine targeted toward men in their 30’s and 40’s that have already attained a moderate level of success in life, and are striving toward more. It goes over current events of interest to this group, such things as exciting adventures, consumer interests, and luxury items as well as ways to make more and save more money. It is a publication owned by Purpose Inc.

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