New Jersey, Feb 6
(IANS) US federal prosecutors have charged 18 people, including at least
five Indians, in one of the largest credit card fraud schemes spanning
28 states and eight countries, including India.
Using over 25,000 fraudulent
credit cards, the accused wired millions of dollars to Pakistan, India,
the United Arab Emirates, Canada, Romania, China and Japan leading to
losses of more than $200 million, prosecutors said.
"The defendants are part of a
massive international fraud enterprise involving thousands of false
identities, fraudulent identification documents, doctored credit reports
and more than $200 million in confirmed losses," FBI Special Agent
James Simpson said in court records.
According to court records, the
scheme involved three basic steps: The defendants allegedly created
thousands of fake identities, pumped up the credit histories of those
fictitious people and then racked up charges on fraudulently obtained
credit cards.
The proceeds, authorities said,
were used for luxury automobiles, electronics, spa treatments, high-end
clothing and millions of dollars in gold. Authorities said the
fraudsters also stockpiled large sums of cash and approximately $70,000
in cash was found in one defendant's oven.
Though the scheme targeted credit card companies, Paul Fishman, US
Attorney for New Jersey, said customers everywhere could feel the
impact.
"Through their greed and their
arrogance, the individuals arrested today and their conspirators
allegedly harmed not only the credit card issuers, but everyone who
deals with increased interest rates and fees because of the money sucked
out of the system by criminals acting in fraud rings like this one,"
Fishman said.
The defendants, including the
alleged ringleaders, Babar Qureshi and Muhammad Shafiq, are due to make
their initial court appearances before US Magistrate Judge Madeline Cox
Arleo in a Newark federal court Wednesday.
0 comments:
Post a Comment