In the
biggest identity theft scam in the US history, 111 people, including at
least 13 of Indian origin, have been charged by federal authorities for
stealing the credit card data of thousands of customers to buy high-end
products worth over $13 million, including Apple gadgets and fancy bags
from Gucci.
Many of the defendants are accused of going on nationwide shopping sprees, staying at five-star hotels, renting luxury automobiles and private jets with forged credit cards that contained the account information of unsuspecting American and European consumers.
The defendants are members of five organised forged credit card and identity theft rings based in Queens County and have ties to Europe, Asia, Africa and West Asia.
Charged in 10 indictments, the defendants perpetrated fraud that cost financial institutions and retail businesses more than $13 million in losses over a 16-month period.
The indictments charge that Imran Khan, Ali Khweiss, Anthony Martin, Sanjay Deowsarran and Amar Singh were "bosses" of criminal enterprises and received the necessary raw material -- lists of credit card account numbers and various blank credit cards.
Among the Indian-origin people charged are Vishnu Harilal, Ravindra Singh, Amar Singh, Neha Punjabi Singh, Ravi Ramroop and Kamal Sanasi.
"This is by far the largest -- and certainly among the most sophisticated -- identity theft/credit card fraud cases that law enforcement has come across," Queens District Attorney, Mr Richard Brown, said.
He said credit card fraud and identity theft are two of the fastest growing crimes in the US, afflicting millions of victims and costing billions of dollars in losses to consumers, businesses and financial institutions.
According to the indictments, between May 2010 and September 2011 counterfeit cards were given to teams of "shoppers" who were sent out on shopping expeditions in New York, Florida, Massachusetts, Los Angeles.
They bought Apple iPads, iPhones, computers, watches and fancy handbags from Gucci, Louis Vuitton, Rolexe and Breitling.
The groups would then resell the merchandise oversees to locations in China, Europe and West Asia. They are also alleged to have used forged credit cards to rent such luxurious automobiles as Lamborghinis and Porsches.
The investigation involved intelligence gathering and electronic eavesdropping on dozens of different telephones in which thousands of conversations in Russian, Mandarin and Arabic were intercepted.
Mr Brown said as part of the investigation, search warrants were executed earlier this week at 15 locations throughout New York City and Long Island.
Among the items allegedly recovered were approximately $650,000 in cash, seven handguns, computers, card readers, embossers, blank credit cards and fake identifications.
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