Private detectives work social media

CLEVELAND, Ohio — The telephoto lens is still one of a private investigator’s most valuable tools, but a Facebook account is becoming just as important.

http://liarcatchers.com/cyber_investigations.html

Especially in the business world.

Increasingly, corporations are hiring private investigators to trawl social-media sites for intelligence about competitors and to watch for insider leaks, product complaints and evidence of employee misconduct.

Investigators still use the old-fashioned ways — snapping secret photos, slapping global positioning devices onto cars, tunneling through criminal files. But today’s corporate sleuths spend more time mining the mass of information people put online about themselves.

“We use social media primarily to research people,” said Avon Lake native Kristin Wenske, an investigative analyst in New York City with Corporate Resolutions Inc., an intelligence service. Wenske’s clients are mostly private-equity firms and hedge funds, and before they plow hundreds of thousands or millions of dollars into a company, they want to make sure its management team is clean.

Private investigator Tom Pavlish of Cleveland also has been assigned to check into chief executives of companies targeted for acquisition. In one case, the CEO had a favorable public image, but research unearthed sexual harassment accusations from two sources. Pavlish’s client decided not to keep the executive when the deal closed because of the potential exposure and liability if the manager repeated his conduct.

“Remarkably, I’ve developed negative information even from LinkedIn references,” Pavlish said.

Spying on the other guys

More than 82 percent of companies use social media to find out information about their competitors, according to a Forrester Research survey last year of more than 150 companies.

Paul Baeppler, a Cleveland police sergeant who founded Integrity Investigations in Westlake, said Tweets, Facebook updates and Google searches back up classic detective work, allowing investigators “to read between the lines and see what’s not actually there and using that as a lead into something more concrete.”

At Corporate Resolutions, Wenske uses social media to look for illegal activity, undisclosed business interests and resume puffing.

For one client who needed help collecting money from a businessman who pleaded poverty, Corporate Resolutions’ cyber-search showed the businessman was hiding assets. The businessman’s son posted comments on Myspace.com about hanging out at his dad’s place in the Caribbean, with photos of the property.

“Based on these comments we extended our asset search to the Caribbean,” Wenske said.

The hazards of an accidental online disclosure also tripped up Hewlett-Packard Co. this year when a vice president mentioned the computer maker’s new web-storage initiative on his LinkedIn profile. Business rivals got a look at previously secret details of the company’s cloud-computing services.

Kroll Inc., an international firm, has a reputation as Wall Street’s private eye because of the agency’s corporate espionage. Social media is a tool that only gets better as it gets more robust, said Peter Turecek, Kroll’s senior managing director of business intelligence and investigations.

Kroll builds profiles of executives in prospective deals, “where we hope the person is good and angelic,” Turecek said. Fraud investigations look at the modus operandi of suspects. Have they done this before? How did they do it? Who in their network may be in on it?

When one client asked Kroll to investigate an intellectual-property breach, the company used photos posted on Twitter — shot from the rooftop of a New York City building — to determine the address of the suspect’s apartment.

In another investigation, Kroll used LinkedIn and Facebook to establish connections between a vendor and an employee who may have embezzled company money.

“Not too long ago it was very difficult to try to ascertain who someone’s network or associates were without doing a lot of data mining and even surveillance, which is fairly labor intensive and therefore costly,” Turecek said.

Mario Zelaya of Majesetic Media in Toronto said he and his partners were shocked to learn how easily they were able to spy on a competitor.

By blending information from Google, Facebook, Twitter and geolocation sites FourSquare and Gowalla, Majestic Media identified which clients the competitor’s salespeople spoke with and what potential deals were occurring. It would have been quite possible to phone the clients and confirm the hunches — and possibly disrupt ongoing negotiations if contracts weren’t signed, Zelaya said.

That’s why he considers such tactics unethical. He said his experiment was meant only as a cautionary lesson about posting sensitive information online.

‘You want to avoid surprises’

Jim Silvania, owner of Silvania Investigative Services in Columbus, has used social media to check the financial strength of people who wanted to invest in a client’s business; to see who was responsible for giving business secrets to a competitor; and to investigate a violent employee who turned out to be a member of the American Nazi Party, posing in an Internet photo with a rifle in his arms and a swastika.

“They provided extra security when they did the termination,” Silvania said.

The Cleveland law office of Porter, Wright, Morris & Arthur has hired investigators to find out more about a company or its executives when there were reasons to be “abundantly prudent,” partner Michael Ellis said.

“You try to gather as much information about the other side, good and bad, as you can. You want to avoid surprises,” he said.

As the effect of social media becomes more intense, companies have begun monitoring what’s being said about them online — and trying to manage their Internet footprint.

In a warren of cubicles at SP Data’s U.S. headquarters in Tower City, many of the office’s 225 employees track what is being said about SP Data’s customers on social media, blogs and opinion sites.

Online chatter about a company or its products that is positive might prompt an SP Data employee to re-Tweet the comment or respond to the writer with a thank you. When the sentiment is negative, the poster might get a response through the same online site, or by phone or email.

“Only 5 percent of posts ever made about a company are responded to,” said Daniel Bemis, president of SP Data. “It should be commonplace.”

Reputation.com Inc., based in Redwood City, Calif., helps businesses promote themselves on the web. Chief Executive Michael Fertick advises businesses to start by understanding how they’re perceived online.

Does 50 Likes on Facebook mean anything? Does the fact that people are mentioning you once a week on Twitter mean anything? How does that compare with other businesses in your field?

Reputation.com says there’s a way to put the Internet genie back in the bottle: Once a company has a handle on its image, it can start to manage it. The firm has made “millions of observations” about the secret rules of Google, Fertick said, to figure out how to shuffle postings about a company to put it in the best light.

As for web monitoring for competitive business intelligence, Fertik figures it’s in its infancy.

A single Fortune 500 business might be mentioned dozens or hundreds of times a day online — a mountain of traffic to analyze. So Reputation.com is designing software that understands human language enough to sift for positive and negative sentiment. The computer analytics are daunting.

“We’ve worked on it for 4½ years,” Fertik said.

But when it comes to human investigators sniffing the Internet for specific companies or employees, the hunt for fertile tidbits is in full swing.

“Every day, in a multitude of ways, in social networks,” Silvania said, “it’s out there.”

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Black Box aiding in accident reconstruction

For police officers investigating serious traffic accidents, marks on the road and damage to a car can help tell the story of how the wreck happened. Evidence at the site can indicate when a driver hit the brakes or when the car skidded off the side of the road.

http://liarcatchers.com/accident_reconstruction.html

Now, Macon police have a new tool to aid in their fatal crash investigations.

Macon police can use a crash data retrieval system for vehicles to tap into a vehicle’s computer after a wreck, much like the “black boxes” that airplane crash investigators check.

Newer model vehicles have computerized parts that control the air bag, brakes and power train, generating data the entire time the car is operating. When the vehicle’s computer senses that a crash is imminent and safety measures need to be deployed, the components record what’s going on inside the car, traffic fatality investigator Austin Riley said.

“It’s to tell me what that car was doing and what that driver was doing,” said Riley, who underwent a week of training on the system after the department purchased it in April. Equipment and training cost about $7,000.

Data can be downloaded by connecting cables to the car at the crash site or by removing the computerized components and hooking them up to a computer later.

Among the details investigators can determine using the downloaded information are the speed of the car in the moments before a wreck, how much pressure was on the gas pedal, when the brakes were activated, whether seat belts were being worn and whether someone was sitting in the passenger seat, Riley said.

But the data doesn’t replace the evidence that officers find at crash sites.

“You just have another tool added to your arsenal,” Riley said.

The crash data retrieval system gives officers an opportunity to download data from vehicles produced as early as 1997.

While the system is new to Macon police, the Georgia State Patrol’s five Specialized Collision Reconstruction Teams have been using the devices for at least a decade, said Capt. Tharon Dukes, the unit’s commander.

More and more car manufacturers are making crash data available in light of the National Highway Safety Administration mandate that all cars with air bags be equipped to provide the data by 2012, Dukes said.

When the state patrol first started using the technology, troopers could only connect to some General Motors vehicles. Since then, Ford, Chrysler, Subaru and most recently Toyota have become accessible.

Computer components making up the passenger car version of a black box are “hardy” and survive most every crash, Dukes said.

Macon police haven’t yet had an opportunity to use the device in investigating a traffic fatality since there haven’t been any since Riley completed training in September. So far in 2011, the department has investigated seven fatal crashes, compared with 23 in 2010.

In Houston County, sheriff’s Cpl. Sean Alexander has been downloading data both for official use and for use in his private business investigating car crashes for about 10 years.

When Warner Robins sisters Bridget and Leslie Sullivent died in a tragic March 9 car crash in Bonaire, Alexander used downloaded data from the car to determine that 17-year-old Leslie Sullivent had over-corrected in her steering. Sullivent was driving a 2007 Pontiac G6 when she abruptly steered and slid across the road, where she collided with a sport utility vehicle.

While it’s clear that the technology doesn’t provide a complete synopsis of a crash, “it’s a lot better than saying ‘I don’t know,’ ’’ Alexander said.

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PI discovers online knockoff fraud

Holiday shoppers looking to avoid crowded malls and sales tax by going online for faux fashion will have fewer choices this year after a massive Internet crackdown on counterfeit designer clothing, jewelry and accessories.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

The push has been nationwide, but in recent months, federal judges in Norfolk alone have ordered the shutdown of dozens of websites selling counterfeit Chanel and Abercrombie & Fitch products. Judges across the country in recent years have issued orders shuttering thousands more involving all the big-name designer labels.

Some say, what’s the harm? But attorney Stephen Gaffigan, who makes his living suing counterfeiters, says it costs the U.S. economy billions of dollars.

“We actually hear that argument quite a bit,” Gaffigan, based in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., said. “I think the plain simple answer is it’s theft. It causes a loss of revenue to all companies. It causes a loss of jobs in the United States.”

And perhaps tossing in a bit of societal guilt, he added, “When you go and buy a $40 knockoff you’re not paying taxes. People selling are not paying taxes. Those are the taxes that fund parks and schools.”

Business for Gaffigan, who is being assisted locally by Norfolk’s Willcox & Savage law firm, and other attorneys in his field picks up during the holiday season as companies like Chanel seek to halt at least some of the online faux sales.

“All the counterfeiters are going wild for the holiday season,” Gaffigan said. “We see a big uptick in the number of websites being set up. Its whole intent and purpose is to mimic the real market.”

Gaffigan and lawyers at Willcox & Savage went to federal court in Norfolk seeking injunctions against websites selling phony Chanel and Abercrombie & Fitch products. In court papers, they laid out their evidence.

In September, private investigator Brandon Tanori went to the website www.chaneloutletmall.org and purchased a black wallet with the Chanel label. He paid $193 and had it shipped to his address in Richmond.

Tanori then went to another website with the Chanel name and purchased a black-and-white ladies leather handbag with the Chanel logo on it for $255.

Gaffigan and Chanel hired Tanori, who works for the California private eye company Investigative Consultants, to make the purchases. Tanori shipped the items to Chanel headquarters in New York, where they were analyzed and determined to be fake, according to court filings.

Private investigators hired by Chanel and other designer labels conduct these purchases over and over across the country, mostly in Virginia, Florida, New York and California. They then take their evidence to a federal judge in the jurisdiction they made the purchase and obtain a restraining order and an injunction shutting down those websites.

In Norfolk, U.S. District Judge Robert G. Doumar earlier this month issued an injunction shutting down 85 websites with the Chanel name. They include buy-chanel.com and chanelbags.org.

Today, when clicking on one of those websites, a shopper won’t find the cheap knockoffs but instead will be redirected to a website detailing the lawsuit against the counterfeiters.

Gaffigan said his investigation has found that these 85 websites are connected to an organized crime syndicate in China. He said he’s been to China to investigate but would not elaborate or comment on what the Chinese government is doing to stop it.

The website www.chanel.com appears to be the only legitimate Chanel website.

Chanel has actually taken over other websites, through other lawsuits. Shoppers looking for a cheap but genuine-looking Chanel purse at www.chanelpurse.net, for example, will be greeted by this message:

“To those of you out there who may be considering the purchase of counterfeit items, we urge you to recognize that by purchasing a counterfeit product you are supporting criminal activity and ask therefore that you refuse to purchase counterfeit goods.”

Earlier this year, U.S. District Judge Mark S. Davis ordered 46 Chanel-knockoff websites shut down and ordered the website operators to pay a $610,000 penalty. Gaffigan says he realizes collecting on this and other judgments is fruitless.

But you can still get the knockoffs at www.fakechanelbags.net. The website doesn’t even try to hide that they are selling counterfeits, with “Fake Chanel bags” and “knock off Chanel purses” in large bold letters on its home page. There, a faux Chanel accordion handbag in lambskin was selling for $209 this week. (A new Chanel lambskin purse sells for a minimum of $3,900 at the company’s Madison Avenue boutique in Manhattan.)

Chanel limits the sale of its products to its own boutiques and to high-end department stores, but a search of “Chanel handbags” under the Google shopping channel resulted in 181,000 hits.

Gaffigan figures 90 percent of them are being run from China, probably by a relatively small number of people.

“They’re not running one website,” he said, “they’re running thousands.”

The federal government and trade groups estimate that some $600 billion in counterfeit goods were sold last year, triple what it was 15 years ago. It’s not just clothing and accessories. It’s software, pharmaceuticals, movies, music, auto and military parts. Authorities say products are made using child labor and profits sometimes fund drug rings and terrorists.

“If you’re a purchaser of these goods you’re participating in basically the downfall of your own society,” Gaffigan said.

Efforts to reach a spokesperson for Chanel were unsuccessful. Tanori also did not respond to messages. Emails sent to addresses listed on some of the counterfeiters websites were not answered.

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Pharmacist charged with prescription fraud

NORRISTOWN — A Blue Bell pharmacist has been admitted to a special probationary program on charges he billed for hundreds of fraudulent prescriptions to illegally receive more than $86,000 from his insurance carrier.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

Carl Dean, 60, of the 200 block of Heatherwood Road, Springfield, was sentenced Tuesday in Montgomery County Court to two years’ probation and 500 hours of community service as part of his acceptance to the county’s Accelerated Rehabilitative Disposition program.

Under the terms of the ARD agreement, Dean must perform the community service with the county’s health department. Dean also must pay $1,966 in court costs. Dean, who owns and operates the Blue Bell Pharmacy at 734 DeKalb Pike, previously made a $5,000 contribution to the Norristown Police Athletic League, court papers indicate.

The ARD program is a special probationary program that allows first-time offenders of non-violent crimes to clear their criminal records if they successfully complete a period of probation.

Dean, who is represented by defense lawyer William J. Winning, had been facing trial on charges of insurance fraud, forgery, receiving stolen property, theft by deception, deceptive business practices and dealing in proceeds of unlawful activities in connection with alleged incidents that occurred between 2007 and 2010.

With the charges, authorities alleged Dean used his name and the names of relatives to submit 874 fake prescriptions to receive $86,070 in reimbursement from Independence Blue Cross Insurance.

There is no allegation that the drugs were actually dispensed. But prosecutors alleged all insurance reimbursement payments from the prescriptions went to support the pharmacy’s operations and were used for the benefit of Dean’s business.

No other persons were charged in connection with the alleged activity.

Investigators contacted the 13 doctors whose names were on the prescriptions and each doctor confirmed the prescriptions were fraudulent, according to court papers.

Court documents indicate an investigation of Dean began when Independence Blue Cross became suspicious of some of the submissions Dean made for payment for drugs he claimed to dispense. Insurance company officials then contacted authorities, according to the affidavit of probable cause filed by county Detective Michael Gilbert.

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Springfield Police need your help with Bank Robber

A man armed with two handguns robbed the Great Southern Bank at 507 E. Kearney St. late Saturday morning, Springfield police said.

http://liarcatchers.com/electronic_surveillance.html

Police said the robbery occurred around 11 a.m., when a man dressed in black clothing and a ski mask came into the bank.

The man then produced the guns and demanded money.

There were only two employees inside the bank and no customers at the time, police said.

The employees gave an undisclosed amount of cash to the robber, who then left. Police weren’t sure how long the robbery took.

Reviews of surveillance video showed the robber had help from a woman in a maroon minivan. The pair fled east from the bank.

The bank is in an area where few of the neighboring businesses were open on the weekend, which made it hard to find out more information about the suspect’s direction of travel, police said.

A release from the Federal Bureau of Investigation said the suspect is a thin man in his 20s or 30s, with a tattoo on his left wrist.

The woman is said to be a white female driving a late-model Chrysler minivan.

Great Southern is offering a $5,500 reward for any information leading to the arrest and conviction of the suspect.

Anyone with information can call the Springfield Police Department at 864-1810 or the FBI office in Springfield at 882-3303 or 816-512-8200.

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Sonya Mitchell is expected to be tried in March for Insurance fraud

Only one of 14 people indicted in an insurance fraud scheme involving the state health plan apparently plans to take her chances at trial.

Sonya Mitchell, 35, is expected to be tried in March on charges stemming from the scheme in which the participants received more than $500,000 from the State and School Employees Health Insurance Plan for medical procedures that were never performed.

http://liarcatchers.com/insurance_fraud.html

Mitchell’s attorney, Cynthia Stewart, could not be reached Friday or Saturday. She told The Clarion-Ledger in September that her client intended to fight the conspiracy and fraud charges.

Mitchell, Zaveon Cooper and Crystal A. Barnes, all of Jackson, had been set for trial this month. The other 11 defendants had pleaded guilty. But last week, the attorney general’s office announced that Cooper and Barnes also had pleaded guilty.

Cooper, 36, was sentenced Tuesday to 12 years in prison and five years of supervised probation. He had entered an open plea Nov. 15 before Rankin County Circuit Judge John Emfinger to three counts each of conspiracy, insurance fraud, mail fraud and making false representations to defraud the government.

Cooper also was ordered to pay, jointly with his co-defendants, nearly $92,000 in restitution to Blue Cross & Blue Shield of Mississippi, plus $3,524 for court fees and other costs.

Blue Cross & Blue Shield administers the health plan and replaced the stolen money.

Cooper’s attorney, Warren Martin Jr., would not comment Friday. But he told The Clarion-Ledger in September ” Mr. Cooper, … did not receive any check from the Blue Cross & Blue Shield network. He has fully cooperated with authorities in their investigation. He looks forward to being fully vindicated by a jury of his peers.”

Barnes, 36, pleaded guilty Nov. 7 to one count each of conspiracy to commit insurance fraud, insurance fraud and making false representations to defraud the government. An employee of Jackson Public Schools during the scheme, she was sentenced to five years in prison plus five years of supervised probation.

Barnes also was ordered to pay, jointly with her co-defendants, $40,000 restitution to Blue Cross & Blue Shield and $3,600 in court fees and other costs.

Under the scheme, which began in December 2008, Mitchell and two other Blue Cross & Blue Shield employees approved phony health claims for state and school employees and got kickbacks in return, prosecutors have said. Mitchell allegedly shared in six checks, ranging from $7,242.40 to $44,379.72, based on information from the attorney general’s office.

Attorney Randy Harris represented Fonda Church, 46, a former state Department of Health employee. He said his client entered a guilty plea because she faced anywhere from 40 to 60 years in prison if convicted at trial. That prospect was too risky, he said, when asked about the case by phone Saturday night. Church, 46, of Jackson received a seven-year sentence.

“She had cooperated with (investigators) early on and (admitted) her wrongdoing,” Harris said. “The evidence was overwhelming.”

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Woburn Mass Missing Teen search renewed

WOBURN (FOX 25 / MyFoxBoston.com) – A private detective believes he could have some new leads in the disappearance of a 14-year-old Woburn girl.

http://liarcatchers.com/missing_persons_investigations.html

Melanie Melanson was last seen at a high school party in the woods on the outskirts of Woburn in Oct. 1989.

Her family has lived with the pain of not knowing what happened to her for 22 years.

Private detective Michael Garrigan has worked on the case since the very beginning.

On Saturday, Garrigan was joined by a team of volunteers and the Connecticut Canine Search and Rescue Group as he headed back to the place where Melanie was last seen. He believes the woods hold the secret to the teenager’s mystery.

“I developed some leads over the past year, we can’t discuss those at this time, but very credible leads from several sources,” Garrigan said to FOX 25.

Trained cadaver dogs sniffed out the area in hopes of confirming what Garrigan says he has already discovered and tested before: a trace of human decomposition in the woods.

This is not the first time that investigators have returned to the woods. Detectives launched a revitalized search in 2009, just before what would have been Melanie’s 35th birthday.

While Melanie’s parents have passed on, her aunts and other family members are standing watch over the new search.

Garrigan says he can’t share many details on the investigation, but says he believes the people he hopes will ultimately be prosecuted were absolutely in the woods on that October night

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steal IRS refunds with ease ?

Almost one year ago, in broad daylight, North Miami postal carrier Bruce Parton was killed for his key — a master key, authorities say, that unlocked personal financial information to residents of a North Miami-Dade condo building.

The two men charged with the 60-year-old’s murder used his so-called Arrow Key to steal the information from dozens of residents’ mailboxes. Like magic, the pair converted the identities of others into an electronic stream of cash, by filing fabricated income tax returns in the victims’ names over the Internet, according to court documents.Their unwitting accomplice turned out to be the Internal Revenue Service. The IRS, without verifying their false income claims, loaded the refunds onto debit cards the men allegedly used in others’ names at Winn-Dixie supermarkets, 7-Eleven convenience stores and Chase Bank, records show.

http://liarcatchers.com/identity_theft_investigation.html

Pikerson J. Mentor, 30, the alleged triggerman who had just been released from prison before Parton’s death, and Saubnet Dwayne Politasse, 23, the accused getaway driver, have joined a disturbing trend of street criminals who have entered the growing ranks of identity-theft scammers, authorities say.

Both Miami-Dade men, who are being held in federal custody without bond, pleaded not guilty this month to new aggravated ID theft charges — along with homicide, use of a firearm, carjacking, robbery, debit-card fraud, unlawful possession of a postal key and, in Mentor’s case, possessing ammunition as a felon.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office and federal agencies won’t comment about the Dec. 6 murder of Parton. The Justice Department is considering whether to seek the death penalty.

But authorities say the case is a dramatic example of identity-theft crimes that have soared in the electronic age. Crooks have graduated from everyday credit-card fraud to stealing people’s identities such as Social Security numbers in order to rob refunds from taxpayers before they file their returns with the IRS.U.S. Attorney Wifredo Ferrer said he expanded a federal task force from Miami-Dade to Broward early this year to fight identity-theft crimes in the region, where prosecutions of defendants have quadrupled to nearly 90 since 2007, court records show.

“We are seeing defendants once involved in other types of crimes [such as drug trafficking] getting involved in identity-theft schemes, because it’s easy to do, lucrative and less violent,” Ferrer told The Miami Herald.

Ferrer said the tax-return rackets are particularly pernicious because they harm two victims: legitimate taxpayers whose identities and refunds are stolen — plus the federal government.

“I’m seeing this as a real threat because we’re dealing with a massive program,” he said.

Indeed, the epidemic of identity-theft and tax-return fraud has spread not only in South Florida but nationwide.

In September, for example, federal agents arrested 49 people — several with criminal records — in the Tampa area on charges of stealing identities and using them to obtain fraudulent tax returns. Investigators in Operation Rainmaker, as the year-long probe was dubbed, intercepted $100 million and recovered $5 million in fraudulent refunds, cash, jewelry, cars and entertainment systems.

Here’s how the scheme worked: After making sure a person’s stolen Social Security number was not used on a tax return, a suspect filed for a refund through online companies such as Turbo Tax. A tax refund was then issued with a prepaid debit card, check or direct deposit.

They “basically corrupted the online tax filing system,” a U.S. Secret Service agent said after the arrests.

Scammers have, in fact, exploited a hole in the IRS electronic filing system, according to the General Accountability Office.

The federal watchdog agency found that the IRS does not actually match tax returns to the W-2 income forms that employers file until months after the filing seasons ends on April 15. Employers file them at the end of February or early March, but the agency does not match them up with incomes reported on 1040 forms until June — way too late to catch identity thieves.

“The refunds go out the door first, and then the matching is done afterward,” Jim White, GAO’s director of strategic issues, said in a report prepared for a congressional hearing last summer. He said the IRS needs to modernize its processing system and require employers to file workers’ income statements earlier in the year.

White said “the IRS could do matching before refunds go out and catch more fraud,” but he warned “this is something that’s years away.”

In the meantime, everyday criminals are moving into the identity-theft rackets, using computers, the Internet and online tax services to fleece the IRS — and taxpayers.

The GAO reports that the number of identity theft-related fraud incidents on tax returns reached 248,000 last year, about five times more than in 2008.

It has become such a viral crime that the chief of the IRS issued a personal and public apology at the congressional hearing in June, when victims testified about the shabby treatment they received after being ripped off. They had to wait many months to get their IRS refunds.

IRS Commissioner Douglas Shulman stressed that the agency is not the cause of identity theft, laying the blame on thieves who steal personal information and use it to file fraudulent refunds. He said the agency, which has promoted electronic filings for fast returns, is trying to improve its ability to spot fake claims before refunds are sent out.

In a statement issued Friday, the IRS expressed its “deepest sympathy to all victims of identity theft,” while acknowledging its impact on the rising number of fraudulent tax returns. But the agency said that for the upcoming tax season, it is “focused on preventing, detecting and resolving identity theft cases as soon as possible.”

Agents with the FBI, Secret Service and Postal Inspection Service say identity-theft crimes have been around for years, but the schemes have become more sophisticated to outsmart financial and other institutions. Criminals can steal personal information from mail boxes, the Internet or employers, then use or sell the data to others.

Some even do it while they’re in jail. Last year, an inmate held at the Monroe County jail near Key West was charged, along with three family members, with filing bogus tax returns seeking nearly $70,000 in refunds. The ringleader recruited fellow inmates, former inmates and relatives to file 2004-06 tax returns with fabricated employment, income and withholdings in a plot to trick the IRS.

Last week, an employee for the Jewish Community Services of South Florida was arrested for selling the personal information of 32 Holocaust survivors for $1,000 to a confidential police informant. The information was to be used to defraud the IRS.

“What’s gotten more advanced is how they get the personal information — all the information that is necessary to get past the safeguards,” said Bladismir Rojo, a South Florida postal inspector.

“In the shady underworld, there are different people who can get you different personal identifier information,” he said.

James Porter, a special agent with the Secret Service in Miami, said criminals have become more clever at exploiting people’s financial security because of the conveniences inherent in electronic banking and filing income tax returns.

Porter said “personal information is a commodity” that can be converted to cash for criminals.

“Any criminal is going to be looking for the biggest score with the least risk — they know what the punishment is for drug trafficking,” Porter said. “This is the next thing they have come up with.”

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Random raids on pedophiles

A fortnight after announcing a public register of known child sex offenders in WA, Police Minister Rob Johnson yesterday said he would also introduce legislation this week to strengthen Child Protection Prohibition Orders.The proposed changes include:

http://liarcatchers.com/pedophile_tracking.html

* Giving police new powers to randomly check the home computers of child sex offenders to make sure they are not accessing child pornography.

* Giving police powers to randomly test known pedophiles for drugs.

* Requiring pedophiles to seek the permission of the Police Commissioner before moving addresses or travelling overseas; and

* Giving courts new powers to order child sex offenders to undergo psychological testing after they are released.

Mr Johnson said one of the biggest changes would be the strengthening of police powers to influence where pedophiles can live.

Police are powerless to stop convicted pedophiles returning to their former homes which could be in areas with many children or even close to victims.

Mr Johnson said by amending the prohibition orders, police could apply to the courts to force convicted pedophiles to live at more suitable locations.”These changes will ensure that children’s safety comes first,” he said.

“Police will be able to act on their concerns about an offender and move them from a location.”

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Private Eye documents broadcast fraud

A legal slap-match has surfaced in federal court in Detroit, where scores of bars and restaurants are getting slapped with lawsuits for televising boxing championships.

http://liarcatchers.com/fraud_investigation.html

The defendants — many of them mom-and-pop venues — are supposed to pay a fee of $800-$3,000 to show the fights, according to the lawsuits.

Instead, records charge, they’re stealing the television signals.

Among the plaintiffs is California-based J&J Sports Production, a sporting events distributor that is sending private eyes into bars and restaurants nationwide in search of TV signal pirates.

According to the lawsuits, J&J has paid for the right to distribute various fights and charges fees to bars and restaurants that want to show them.

Per the federal court dockets, private eyes are finding hundreds of scofflaws nationwide.

In metro Detroit, more than 50 piracy lawsuits have been filed against local businesses in the last three years. Five were filed Nov. 11, and plenty more are in the pipeline.

Though most of the cases get settled out of court, some bar owners fight back. They argue they either didn’t know about the fee or that they paid the cable company for the boxing match.

Whatever the excuse, J&J says the message is clear: Pay the fee or prepare to get sucker-punched with a lawsuit.

Showdown over TV boxing matches at bars
When a private investigator walked into the Brews Brothers Bar and Grill in Melvindale, it wasn’t hard to figure out a boxing championship was going on.

On the bar’s 13 TV screens, Oscar De La Hoya — in red trunks with white letters spelling Golden Boy — was taking on Floyd Mayweather. It was Round 3 of the May 5, 2007, match at the MGM Grand Casino in Las Vegas.

The investigator, who was on a mission to prove the bar was illegally televising the showdown, got what he needed, records show.

His findings triggered a lawsuit.

“It’s not hard to catch ’em,” said Mt. Clemens attorney Ben Altoia, who said he believes TV signal piracy lawsuits are a pervasive problem nationwide, including in metro Detroit. “There are bars that have been caught, and then a year later … they’re caught again, and again. They think, ‘Well, we got caught once. The heat is off us. Maybe no one is looking.’ ”

That’s not the case.

In federal court in Detroit, more than 50 TV signal piracy lawsuits involving boxing matches have been filed in the last three years — five of them filed Nov. 11 alone. The latest defendants are Man Dee’s Lounge, Club Millenium and Keynote Sports Bar & Lounge — all in Detroit; Los Amigos in Ypsilanti Township, and Bistro Bar and Grill in Pittsfield Township.

All five establishments are accused of televising the Manny Pacquiao vs. Miguel Cotto welterweight championship on Nov. 14, 2009. The lawsuits each seek $150,000 in damages.

Some say that’s extreme.

“Usually, the bar owner doesn’t even know what they’re doing is wrong,” said California attorney Matthew Pare, who specializes in TV signal piracy cases across the country. “It goes, in my opinion, way too far. The damages are extremely excessive.”

Pare, who is currently handling at least 30 piracy lawsuits in several states, said that in most cases, the defendants have paid something for the boxing match — just not the right amount.

For example, Pare said, the bar and restaurant owners may have a residential TV subscription with a particular company and pay that rate for the fight — unaware they have to have a commercial subscription rate.

In other cases, he said, the pub may have paid the cable company for the fight and assumes everything is taken care of, when it’s not.

That’s what the Blackberry Bar and Grill in Detroit is arguing in a pending case with J&J Productions, a California-based sporting event distributor suing the pub for allegedly stiffing it on a boxing match fee. According to the lawsuit, the establishment on Grand River Avenue unlawfully televised “The Dream Match” welterweight championship between De La Hoya and Manny Pacquiao on Dec. 6, 2008.

In court documents, Blackberry said it paid Comcast a fee to show the fight but that Comcast never informed the bar it needed a sublicensing agreement to show the match.

“My client is just a mom-and-pop operation,” said Southfield attorney Arlene Woods, who is defending the Blackberry Bar and Grill.

She said the bar asked Comcast what it needed to do to televise the fight. “We followed 100% what Comcast instructed my client to do,” Woods said, without elaborating.

Comcast has denied any liability in court documents. Comcast officials declined to comment to the Free Press.

The cable argument also may come into play for Man Dee’s Lounge, which was sued Nov. 11.

The bar’s owner, Alvin Taylor, who learned about the lawsuit from the Free Press, said he wasn’t sure about showing any boxing matches. He said he would check his cable bill.

“I know the consequences for showing the fight,” said Taylor, noting he doesn’t show boxing matches because it costs too much. “I can’t afford it, so I don’t have them.”

The same goes for David Corona, general manager of Los Amigos, which also was sued Nov. 11.

“We never show fights. It’s too expensive,” said Corona, who said he’ll get a lawyer and dig out his satellite bill.

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