Fraud Investigation prescription fraud

Two out-of-town suspects are in custody following two incidents Sunday involving attempted prescription fraud.

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Culpeper County Sheriff’s Office Deputy C.T. Hibbs responded to an alleged prescription fraud at a Montanus Drive area pharmacy after a report of a female suspect forging a signature for medication and attempting to fill the prescription around 3 p.m.

Hibbs conducted an investigation on scene and upon departing the pharmacy saw a BMW along Bus. 29 in which the female suspect was reportedly seen leaving. The deputy then identified a female matching the suspect’s description in a different vehicle, a Chevrolet HHR, according to a CCSO release.

Four other deputies responded to pull over both vehicles on North Main Street.

The female suspect, Adrienne M. Aikins, 28, of Greensboro, N.C. was questioned about the alleged prescription fraud and found to be in possession of marijuana. She was arrested on scene.

Hibbs also questioned three men in the BMW including Otis Mitchell, 39, of Fredericksburg. He too was found to be in possession of marijuana and is believed to be involved in another alleged prescription fraud that occurred earlier Sunday at another Culpeper pharmacy, according to CCSO.

As a result of the incident, Aikins faces charges of possession of marijuana and attempted prescription fraud. Mitchell faces charges of possession with intent to distribute marijuana, attempted prescription fraud and possessing a schedule I or II drug. Both are being held in Culpeper County Jail; Aikins on $5,000 bond and Mitchell on $10,000 secured bond.

The suspects know each other, according to police.

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identity theft prevention for senior citizens

ELKINS – “We find that seniors tend to be a lot of the times a target for identity theft,” said Rita McCrobie, a representative of the WV State Attorney General’s Office.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

And the scams aren’t always the same.

“Just have to be on guard all the time,” McCrobie said.

That’s why some Barbour County senior citizens attended a discussion about identity theft Monday afternoon at the Barbour County Senior Center.

“Well, it’s always good to find out any information you can about possible scams or people taking advantage of the elderly,” said discussion attendee Richard McDaniels.

Identity thieves often target the elderly because they live alone, are hard of hearing or are unaware of the scams going around.

“My generation tends to be more concerned with the things that are going on in the world and more sympathetic than the younger generations,” McDaniels said. “That’s not everyone, of course. But I think generally we are more gullible and sympathetic.”

The State Attorney General’s office sends representatives to senior centers to spread the word about what types of scams are out there, how to avoid them, and what to be aware of.

“Never give out any kind of information over the phone no matter what they tell you,” McCrobie said. “Because so many times they will tell you it’s the bank calling, it’s the courthouse calling. And you actually look at your caller I. D. And it says that. So you think you’re safe….but you’re not.”

“Never give out your social security number to anyone,” McDaniels said.

But just knowing what to look out for might not be enough.

Because as reluctant as you are to give out your information, these thieves are equally as reluctant to take no for an answer.

“Sometimes people come around and bully them about things and scare them into signing things and accepting things they don’t want,” McCrobie said.

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Fraud Investigation sheriff Jerry Bowman and Clerk Donald Whitten

CHARLESTON, W.Va. – Lincoln County Sheriff Jerry Bowman and Clerk Donald Whitten will plead guilty to charges that they attempted to flood the 2010 Democratic primary with fraudulent absentee ballots, becoming the latest southern West Virginia officeholders ensnared by an investigation into election fraud, federal and state officials announced Monday.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

Bowman has agreed to plead guilty to a federal conspiracy charge. He is accused of trying to stuff the ballot box in his favor while running for circuit clerk, U.S. Attorney Booth Goodwin and Secretary of State Natalie Tennant said. Whitten will plead guilty to lying to a retired FBI agent hired by Tennant to investigate the influx of absentee ballots in that primary.
A judge later threw out more than 300 contested absentee ballots, reversing Bowman’s initial victory and securing the nomination for incumbent Circuit Clerk Charles Brumfield.
Bowman and Whitten have agreed to resign by the time of their plea hearing, which are not yet scheduled, and have already begun cooperating with investigators. Their plea agreements, filed Monday, mention but do not identify co-conspirators. Prosecutors say the investigation continues.
Bowman, who is finishing his second term as sheriff and cannot seek a third under the state constitution, signed his plea agreement last week. Having won his latest term as clerk in 2010, Whitten agreed to plead guilty under a deal signed in late December.
Fearing a close race, Bowman allegedly conspired with Whitten and an unidentified candidate for county commission to visit voters and ask them to apply for absentee ballots, according to Bowman’s plea agreement.
“The Candidates further agreed that they would complete absentee ballot applications for voters,” the agreement documents said. “The Candidates also agreed that on those applications they would state certain reasons that voters were legally eligible to vote absentee, regardless of whether those reasons were true.”
Bowman went on to fill out more than 100 absentee ballot applications, and for most “knowingly and intentionally provided false reasons for voters’ eligibility to vote absentee,” the filing said. It further alleged that Bowman would later revisit the voters once their absentee ballots arrived, telling most how to vote and marking at least six of these ballots himself.
Bowman also is accused of illegally delivering ballots to voters, his plea agreement said. Whitten is accused of lying to the retired FBI agent when he denied providing those absentee ballots.
The charges against Whitten and Bowman arrive just six years after several Lincoln and Logan county officials and others pleaded guilty to charges arising from a federal vote-buying probe. That case was triggered by the 2004 Democratic primary. Those convicted included then-Lincoln County Circuit Clerk Greg Stowers and county Assessor Jerry Weaver. Though he resigned at the time, Weaver is now running for county sheriff.
Besides resigning, Bowman and Whitten have agreed to swear off future public office or political campaigning, according to the deals each signed.
Monday’s press conference at the Robert C. Byrd U.S. Courthouse in Charleston follows Saturday’s deadline for candidates to file in this year’s elections. With the primary set for May 8, an array of federal, state and county offices are on the ballot.

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Identity Theft DONT CARRY IN YOUR WALLETT

We carry a great risk of becoming victims of identity theft every day, and it all starts in the wallet and purse. Every piece of plastic, every password, and every receipt you put in your wallet or purse could be the very thing thieves use to compromise your finances and steal your identity. The best way to protect yourself and your belongings is to use common sense and not carry the following items:

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Social Security card and number

Your Social Security number is incredibly valuable and it can be detrimental if someone gets access to it. You may use your Social Security number for work documentation and government services, but very rarely will you have to show your Social Security card. If your card gets into the wrong hands, there’s no telling what a person will do with it. Thieves can open a credit card in your name, apply for loans, and much worse. If you can’t memorize this number for the life of you, do not write the numbers on paper and leave it in your wallet or purse. Even if you delete the dashes, a thief can figure out what number this is because all SSN have nine digits. Be smart and leave your Social Security card and number in a safe place with other important documents.

Passport

When traveling abroad, you can’t really get around carrying your passport on you. However, American travelers are advised to pack extra passport photos and a photocopy of their passport information in case it is lost or stolen. These documents and photos should be left in the hotel, preferably in a hotel safe. This will make getting a replacement easier and protect you from other identity theft dangers.

This article shared from :

( http://www.criminaljusticedegreesguide.com/features/10-things-you-should-never-carry-in-your-purse-or-wallet.html  )

Checkbook

It might be convenient to keep your checkbook on hand, but it can be a big mess if someone gets ahold of it. One look at your checkbook and a thief will have access to your account number, routing number, and possibly your signature. If they’re really sneaky, they might be able to forge your signature and cash a check. Avoid this fiasco by keeping your checkbook at home in a safe place.

Passwords

Passwords, such as PIN numbers, e-mail passwords, and even alarm codes should not be carried around in your wallet or purse. It doesn’t take much for a thief to figure out that four digits could be your PIN number. If you cannot remember important passwords that you need to use on a regular basis, then store them on a protected computer or phone.

Gift cards and certificates

Many people carry gift cards and certificates in their wallet because they never know when they’ll end up using them. This might seem convenient, but if your wallet or purse gets stolen, you’ll be kicking yourself for not leaving these gifts at home. Gift cards and certificates are as good as money, and you don’t have to show an ID to use them. Avoid this risk by leaving gift cards and certificates at home until you’ve picked a day to use them.

USB devices

As wonderful and convenient as USBs are, they can be very problematic if a thief gets ahold of one. Many USBs contain confidential files and personal information that a thief would love to have. Not to mention, all of your hard work and important documents could be lost in an instant if someone snags your purse or wallet.

Receipts

Many people disregard receipts and leave them hanging around or stuffed into a purse or wallet, but these small pieces of paper can be quite telling, especially to a smart thief. Some receipts contain your credit card information and signature, which opens the door for identity theft and forgery. Also, if a thief has access to your address and they can see what you bought on a receipt, they may go as far as to rob your house.

Unprotected cell phone

A cell phone without a password is a dangerous thing to carry around. A thief will have full access to your e-mail and other personal information stored in your phone. Placing a password on your phone could deter a thief from taking your phone in the first place and prevent them from accessing any personal information. If your phone does not have a password option, then carry it in a pocket or on your body instead of in a bag.

Too many credit cards

Carrying all of your credit cards in your wallet can be very risky and quite the hassle if they get stolen. Not only will you have to cancel each and every credit card, but you’ll also have to use cash or write checks while you wait on new credit cards to be sent. To avoid this fiasco, only carry the cards you use on a regular basis and leave the rest at home so you’re not completely S.O.L.

Large amounts of cash

Carrying a lot of cash in your wallet or purse is risky for many obvious reasons. If you get mugged, you’ll be out a lot of money. It’s never a bad idea to keep some cash on you, especially when traveling, but be sure to bring only as much as you need and don’t flash it around for others to see.

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Fraud Investigation Stifled by Justice department?

A TOP official in Victoria’s Justice Department attempted to suppress an internal fraud investigation that targeted one of their colleagues, telling corruption investigators their probe would create an ”embarrassment” for the agency.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

The official’s interference in the fraud probe at the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages was secretly recorded and sparked an Ombudsman’s inquiry, plus a review of the registry by auditors.

It is one of several examples of misconduct or poor processes at the registry uncovered during an Age investigation, including substandard security measures around the storage and auditing of blank security paper, which is highly sought-after by identity thieves because it enables them to make fake birth certificates. The internal fraud investigation began in late 2009, when Justice Department investigators uncovered a senior manager allegedly spending thousands of dollars in registry funds for personal use.

Advertisement: Story continues below Investigators recommended in a report that this manager’s conduct be referred to “the Office of Public Prosecutions in regard to theft, fraud and other like offences”.

But after presenting evidence of the alleged fraud to a top Justice Department official – whom The Age is not naming for legal reasons – the investigators were berated for conducting an inquiry that could embarrass the department.

“There are many different ways to slice everything up and to arrive at an outcome which is a better outcome than that which unearths an embarrassment for the department, the organisation and for those people who are involved in whatever way,” the top departmental official was recorded telling investigators.

When pressed about the suspect’s shredding of receipts to cover up the alleged theft of taxpayers’ money, the top official told the investigators: “That is a general part of what happens in most government organisations.”

In a later confidential departmental report about their probe, the internal investigators wrote that the top official had “declined” their request that the suspect be suspended “so as to restrict the ability to destroy evidence and to safeguard public monies”.

A spokesman for the Justice Department confirmed the existence of the internal fraud inquiry and said a subsequent review of the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages had led to “changes … to the management team at BDM”. The Age understands that, after the complaint by the corruption investigators to the Ombudsman, the senior official was moved to a new role in the department, while the staff member accused of fraud was disciplined.

The spokesman said: “The Department of Justice takes the management of all public money seriously and acted decisively to ensure that all the issues in relation to this matter were investigated appropriately.” He also said issues on the security of sensitive identity papers had been addressed.

Sources from the registry said blank birth certificate documents were often left where they could be easily stolen.

“The department commissioned Ernst & Young to review document control at BDM,” the spokesman said. ”The review made recommendations … which have been fully implemented. The department separately commissioned an independent review into staff-management dynamics, culture and morale at BDM. Its recommendations are being fully implemented.”

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Email Tracing FDA may not have done it correctly

The Food and Drug Administration secretly monitored the personal e-mail of a group of its own scientists and doctors after they warned Congress that the agency was approving medical devices that they believed posed unacceptable risks to patients, government documents show.

http://liarcatchers.com/email_tracing.html

The surveillance — detailed in e-mails and memos unearthed by six of the scientists and doctors, who filed a lawsuit against the FDA in U.S. District Court in Washington last week — took place over two years as the plaintiffs accessed their personal Gmail accounts from government computers.

Information garnered this way eventually contributed to the harassment or dismissal of all six of the FDA employees, the suit alleges. All had worked in an office responsible for reviewing devices for cancer screening and other purposes.

Copies of the e-mails show that, starting in January 2009, the FDA intercepted communications with congressional staffers and draft versions of whistleblower complaints complete with editing notes in the margins. The agency also took electronic snapshots of the computer desktops of the FDA employees and reviewed documents they saved on the hard drives of their government computers.

FDA computers post a warning, visible when users log on, that they should have “no reasonable expectation of privacy” in any data passing through or stored on the system, and that the government may intercept any such data at any time for any lawful government purpose.

But in the suit, the doctors and scientists say the government violated their constitutional privacy rights by gazing into personal e-mail accounts for the purpose of monitoring activity that they say was lawful.

“Who would have thought that they would have the nerve to be monitoring my communications to Congress?” said Robert C. Smith, one of the plaintiffs in the suit, a former radiology professor at Yale and Cornell universities who worked as a device reviewer at the FDA until his contract was not renewed in July 2010. “How dare they?”

An FDA spokeswoman, Erica Jefferson, said the agency does not comment on litigation.

But according to FDA internal documents that the scientists and doctors obtained under the Freedom of Information Act, the agency told the Department of Health and Human Services’ inspector general that they had improperly disclosed confidential business information about the devices. The agency requested that an investigation be opened in May 2010.

The scientists and doctors denied sharing information improperly. The HHS inspector general’s office, which oversees FDA operations, declined to pursue an investigation, finding no evidence of criminal conduct. It also said that the doctors and scientists had a legal right to air their concerns to Congress or journalists.

FDA officials sought a second time that year to initiate action against the scientists and doctors. “We have obtained new information confirming the existence of information disclosures that undermine the integrity and mission of the FDA and, we believe, may be prohibited by law,” wrote Jeffrey Shuren, director of the FDA’s Center for Devices and Radiological Health, on June 28, 2010.

The inspector general, after consulting with federal prosecutors, declined the second request, as well.

Michael Sussmann, a former federal prosecutor who is now a partner at the Perkins Coie law firm, said the FDA’s warning on its computers gave the agency latitude to conduct extensive monitoring. “Anything on this agency’s network is fair game by use of this banner, as long as they’re lawfully targeting their employee.”

Yet the case sheds light on the lengths to which a federal agency will go to monitor employees. At issue, experts say, is whether the purpose of the monitoring was legal and what level of monitoring on government computers is reasonable at a time when technology increasingly blurs the lines between work and home.

“The FDA has a huge responsibility to protect public health and safety,” Sen. Charles E. Grassley (R-Iowa) said in a statement last week. “It’s hard to see how managers apparently thought it was a good use of time to shadow agency scientists and monitor their e-mail accounts for legally protected communications with Congress.”

Concerns about devices

The FDA scientists and doctors, all of whom worked for the agency’s Office of Device Evaluation, said they first made internal complaints beginning in 2007 that the agency had approved or was on the verge of approving at least a dozen radiological devices whose effectiveness was not proven and that posed risks to millions of patients. Frustrated, they also brought their concerns to Congress, the White House and the HHS inspector general.

Three of the devices risked missing signs of breast cancer, the scientists and doctors warned, according to documents and interviews. Another risked falsely diagnosing osteoporosis, leading to unnecessary treatments; one ultrasound device could malfunction while monitoring pregnant women in labor, risking harm to the fetus; and several devices for colon cancer screening used such heavy doses of radiation that they risked causing cancer in otherwise healthy people, the FDA scientists and doctors said.

They also had expressed concern about a computer-aided imaging device that searched for signs of breast cancer. Three times, a team of experts, including Smith, recommended against approval, and middle managers agreed in each case, he said. After the third rejection, a senior manager approved the device in 2008, he said.

Most of the devices the scientists and doctors questioned have received approvals only in the past two years, making it difficult to evaluate whether the fears that the FDA scientists and doctors expressed were valid.

But the concerns were not isolated. In 2009 and 2011, the Government Accountability Office, Congress’s auditing arm, warned that some risky medical devices win approval through a process that is insufficiently stringent. The Institute of Medicine concluded in a major study last year that the FDA process for approving medical devices needed to be revised and based on “sound science.”

Though the FDA declined to comment for this story, agency officials last year dismissed an analysis by the Archives of Internal Medicine claiming that unsafe medical devices were rushed to market, saying a relatively small number were recalled between 2005 and 2009. An FDA spokeswoman also said last year the agency had made changes to make the review process safer.

Snapshots of desktops

After President Obama’s election, the FDA scientists and doctors wrote to his transition team in 2009, alleging corruption at the agency and warning about risks posed by the breast-cancer screening device.

After they sent the letter, which they shared with members of Congress, several news organizations reported on the concerns. In some of those reports, FDA officials said they were addressing the issues.

Within days after the news reports appeared, the president of the company that made the device, Ken Ferry of iCAD Inc., based in Nashua, N.H., wrote a letter to the FDA alleging that confidential business information had been leaked. Ferry declined to comment for this story.

Using automated software, the agency began taking snapshots of the scientists’ computer screens showing documents as they were being backed up and e-mails being moved from one file to another, the FDA documents show. The agency created a file, “FDA 9,” to store e-mails and documents gathered from nine scientists and doctors who originally had complained. (Three of them are not involved in the lawsuit filed last week.)

The first documented FDA interception was of an e-mail dated Jan. 29, 2009, shortly after the letter from Ferry. In it, device reviewer Paul T. Hardy asked a congressional aide, Joanne Royce, for assurances that “it is not a crime to provide information to the Congress about potential misconduct by another Agency employee.”

Royce replied: “[Y]ou and your colleagues have committed no crime. . . . you guys didn’t even provide confidential business information to Congress.”

Hardy, who is among the six employees who filed the suit, was fired in November after a negative performance review; an internal FDA letter obtained in separate litigation quoted managers saying they did not “trust” him. Of the other five scientists and doctors, the suit says two did not have their contracts renewed, two suffered harassment and werepassed over for promotions, and one was fired.

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Fraud Investigation Tshwane Speakers office

The relationship with a marketing company will form the core of an investigation into a senior official at the Tshwane speaker’s office.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

Strategic Executive Director Mapiti Matsena was suspended on Friday for alleged tender fraud.

Sources said that a report to city manager Jason Ngobeni stated that TKO Promotions had been disqualified from the bidding process.

Matsena intervened to make sure the company won the R8million tender to market the ward committee election.

Two mayoral imbizos held in Hammanskraal and Bronkhorstspruit held in 2011 also raised red flags.

A source said in the past, imbizos were organised by staff within the speaker’s office and usually never cost more R300,000.

But in 2011, Matsena outsourced the events to TKO Promotions costing the city rate payers about R2million each.

The company has dismissed claims of corruption

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Identity Theft IRS Warns

Maria Rojas held her W2, waiting to file her taxes at Jackson Hewitt Tax Service center. The recent trip to the office in her local Walmart would take her a step closer to a much-awaited refund check.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Like many taxpayers in the Rio Grande Valley, Rojas is not very familiar with the tax code, so she goes to the professionals.

“There are lots of places where they advertise the taxes, but I just go here because it’s convenient and I know it’s safe,” Rojas said.

It’s no wonder safety is on Rojas’ mind these days.

While filing her taxes five years ago, she was notified by the Internal Revenue Service that someone else had already filed an income tax return under her name.

Rojas had become a victim of identity theft.

In recent years, the IRS has seen a significant increase in refund fraud and identity theft, according to testimony that Steven Miller, the agency’s deputy commissioner for services and enforcement, gave in November before the U.S. House Committee on Oversight and Government Reform.

The government is hurt by individuals using stolen information to file fraudulent refund claims, while victimizing innocent taxpayers by impeding their ability to file or receive a refund, Miller said.

Additionally the taxpayer may be adversely affected if the IRS initiates an enforcement action involving the fraudulent refund. For instance, if a Social Security number is stolen, an imposter may use it to get a job, and the imposter’s employer may report that income earned to the IRS under the stolen number. That could lead the IRS to believe that the victimized taxpayer hadn’t fully reported his or her income, prompting the agency to take action.

Since 2008, the IRS has identified more than 404,000 taxpayers who have been affected by identity theft, according to information released by the IRS. But the agency can’t inspect 100 million tax refunds individually to ensure all are correct.

Preventing and investigating identity theft and fraudul will be one of the IRS’s top tasks — one for which they have partnered with local law enforcement and other federal agencies, Miller said.

In 2011, the agency disrupted $1.3 billion in refunds from being erroneously given to identity thieves.

The IRS has begun new procedures to flag suspicious returns, Miller said, and it has begun issuing new identification numbers for identity theft victims in order to facilitate their returns and to keep others from filing future returns in their name.

The IRS continues to task its Criminal Investigations Division with detecting and investigating tax and other financial fraud.

Some of the notable cases investigated by the agency last year include:

>> A woman from Ohio who was sentenced to six-and-a-half years in federal prison after filing 140 false returns using stolen information.

>> A North Carolina man who worked for a U.S. government data warehouse and was convicted of stealing information to file several fraudulent returns. He was sentenced to 11 years in prison.

According to the IRS, telltale signs of identity theft include having more than one tax return, having a balance due or collections taken for a year where the taxpayer didn’t file a return, or having IRS records show that the person received wages from an employer that is unknown to the person.

To prevent identity theft, individuals shouldn’t carry their Social Security card or any document bearing the Social Security number, according to information released by the IRS. Additionally individuals should check their credit scores at least once a year to identify any irregularities.

Those who file their own taxes using e-file should burn the forms to a removable disc — like a CD or a flash drive — and delete the files from the computer’s hard drive.

Victims of identity theft should notify the IRS as soon as possible and file an Identity Theft Affidavit so the agency can begin working with the victim and take the appropriate measures.

Rojas was able to contact the IRS to get her tax problems squared away. If all goes well, this year she will receive not only her tax refund check, but also a little extra money from the Earned Income Tax Credit.

Though she still relies on the knowledge of specialists to help her navigate the law when tax time rolls around, there’s one lesson she has learned all too well: to keep an eye on her legal documents

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Electronic Surveillance What does Supreme court ruling mean for us?

The Supreme Court’s decision last week regarding GPS tracking of criminal suspects was a very big deal for Antoine Jones, a D.C. nightclub owner and convicted drug dealer who saw his conviction overturned.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

What it means for the rest of us is not so clear.

Similarly, former religious school teacher Cheryl Perich was quite plainly told by the justices earlier this month that she could not pursue a discrimination complaint against her former church and bosses. Perich’s duties and training put her among those covered by a “ministerial exception” that meant the church could fire her without violating the Americans with Disabilities Act.

But which other church employees might be considered “ministers” and which other kinds of suits might be banned were left for another day.

In those two controversial cases and a third — regarding how to draw Texas’s redistricting lines in the face of tremendous growth in the state’s Hispanic community — the court was unanimous in its judgments.

Each decided an important issue. In Perich’s case, it was the court’s first acknowledgment that such a “ministerial exception” is allowed by the Constitution. Jones’s case signaled the court’s concern about the risks modern technology poses for Fourth Amendment rights, and a majority called for Congress to address the issue.

The Texas case reaffirmed that — for now — a state with a history of discrimination may not impose its own redistricting plan without federal approval, while advising courts considering such issues to be mindful of state sovereignty.

Although Texas’s Republican-dominated political leadership got more of what it wanted, both sides claimed some measure of victory. (Settlement talks are now underway in the case, which will have a role in deciding which party controls the House of Representatives after November.)

Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. acknowledged the questions left open by the Perich decision, Hosanna-Tabor Evangelical Lutheran Church and School v. EEOC . The court, he said, would not adopt “a rigid formula for deciding when an employee qualifies as a minister. It is enough for us to conclude, in this our first case involving the ministerial exception, that the exception covers Perich.”

In United States v. Jones , there is even less guidance. Without a valid warrant, law enforcement officials tracked Jones’s every movement for 28 days, and Justice Sonia Sotomayor succinctly stated why the case drew such attention from lawyers, law enforcement and those concerned about privacy.

“GPS monitoring generates a precise, comprehensive record of a person’s public movements that reflects a wealth of detail about her familial, political, professional, religious, and sexual associations,” Sotomayor wrote. “The government can store such records and efficiently mine them for information years into the future.”

All nine justices agreed the surveillance violated Jones’s rights and mandated overturning his conviction. But they split on the reasoning. The only clear holding from the decision is that five justices — including Sotomayor — concluded the physical act of placing a GPS device on the Jeep Jones drove constituted a “search” under the Fourth Amendment’s protection against unreasonable searches and seizures.

Fourth Amendment experts such as Christopher Slobogin at Vanderbilt Law School found the court’s consideration of the issue important but the decision “a little disappointing.” Most government tracking does not involve planting a device on a car, he said, and the opinion leaves “much up in the air.”

Lori Andrews, a professor at the Chicago-Kent College of Law, went further, saying the decision “provides little guidance about which activities might be considered searches, which require warrants, and which voluntary disclosures to third parties might waive Fourth Amendment rights.”

Lisa S. Blatt, a Washington lawyer who appears frequently before the court, said justices in the cases so far have been content to focus on agreement and reject invitations “to draw lines in the sand.”

Steven R. Shapiro, legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said he was “reluctant to read too much” into the court’s unanimous decisions.

“As you will recall, Roberts joined the court promising more unanimity,” Shapiro said. “He delivered in his first year, and it fell apart in his second. Some of this is just coincidental.”

Shapiro said he thought the court “genuinely felt that the boundaries of the ministerial exception could be best worked out through case-by-case adjudication.” And even the four members of the court who felt Jones should be decided on privacy grounds were “wary about laying down rules about future technology and its impact on the Fourth Amendment beyond raising a yellow caution flag,” he said

Justice Antonin Scalia last week told an audience that justices ask so many hypothetical questions during oral arguments because they are not focused on just the outcome of the case at hand. “Millions of other people” will have to live with the court’s precedents, he said.

Taking small steps is one way to approach such decisions. But it may not lend itself to other items on the court’s substantial agenda, including health care overhaul, the case that will define the term

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Fraud investigation Marsha Elmore

The owner of a tax preparation business was sentenced Thursday to 184 months in prison, the Justice Department and Internal Revenue Service announced.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

Owner Marsha Elmore of Wetumpka used her business, Community Tax, to run a scheme to steal tax refunds by filing false tax returns with stolen identities, according to a release from the Department of Justice.

Elmore had been indicted by a federal grand jury on Aug. 31, 2011 and pleaded guilty on Nov. 15, 2011 to one count each of filing false claims, wire fraud and aggravated identity theft. Elmore had previously been sentenced to 60 months in prison for a violation of supervised release, which was based on the conduct for which Elmore was sentenced Thursday.

The sentence of 184 months is to run consecutively to her previous sentence of 60 months.

Elmore’s fraudulent activity ran from at least 2009 until July 2011, when she was arrested by the IRS on a criminal complaint. She unlawfully obtained the names, Social Security numbers and dates of birth of various individuals and used them to file false tax returns through Community Tax, according to the release.

The tax returns claimed refunds that were directed to bank accounts and debit cards that Elmore controlled. She also filed false tax returns using online filing websites. All together, Community Tax and Elmore were linked to almost 1,400 tax returns during this time period.

In her plea agreement, Elmore admitted that she personally filed many of the returns, a number of which were false. In sentencing Elmore, the court found that the intended tax loss was just over $2.5 million, according to the release.

“This case is an example of how criminals use innocent people’s identities for their own financial gain,” stated George Beck, U.S. Attorney for the Middle District of Alabama. “To steal these victims’ identities and use them to file false tax returns not only makes the U.S. tax payer a victim, but also victimizes the unsuspecting person whose identity has been stolen. We will continue to do everything possible under the law to protect these unsuspecting victims from these criminals.”

U.S. District Judge Mark Fuller also ordered Elmore to pay $1,157,241 in restitution.

The case was investigated by special agents of the IRS – Criminal Investigation and was prosecuted by Tax Division trial attorneys Jason H. Poole and Michael Boteler and Assistant U.S. Attorney Todd Brown.

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Posted in Private Investigator Lexington | Tagged | Comments Off on Fraud investigation Marsha Elmore