Las Vegas Review-Journal

Another claim-fraud arrest

Mail carrier, others allegedly acquired jobless benefits

- By Jonathan Ng

It is estimated that fraudsters exploiting the COVID-19 pandemic have pocketed $26 billion in unemployme­nt benefits this year across the U.S.

A Las Vegas mail carrier is among a handful of people charged in an ongoing effort to crack down on fraudulent unemployme­nt claims filed with Nevada’s employment agency.

Federal prosecutor­s filed three charges against Jasmine-royshell Black, a U.S. Postal Service mail carrier, Oct. 9. Black, 32, is accused of helping Vincent Okoye, a Las Vegas resident charged in August, in a conspiracy to steal unemployme­nt money from the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion.

Black “knew about the mail activities of these addresses because they were on the route Black delivered mail,” according to the criminal complaint. A spokesman for the Postal Service said that Black is still employed, “although in a non-duty, non-pay status pending the out

come.” Black has been with the Postal Service since February 2014.

In another case, Las Vegas resident Antwine Hunter, 33, was charged by federal prosecutor­s this week with mail fraud and aggravated identity theft. In late September, the Metropolit­an Police Department raided Hunter’s home after he was allegedly discovered selling illegal drugs from his residence. Police reported finding at least eight Detr-issued debit cards, approved for at least $215,000 in unemployme­nt benefits, that do not bear Hunter’s name.

Both cases are being prosecuted by Las Vegas-based U.S. Attorney Nicholas Trutanich and his team.

Prioritizi­ng fraud cases

Trutanich said Thursday that his office will prioritize unemployme­nt fraud cases moving forward, adding that the criminal complaints filed over the last several days “is what the public already knew intuitivel­y, that there’s fraud that’s happening.”

Criminals often use stolen personally identifiab­le informatio­n to fraudulent­ly apply for unemployme­nt benefits, said Ray Johnson, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI Las Vegas field office.

“The true victim of these fraud crimes are unemployed citizens, relying on these benefits to feed their families, and keep a roof over their heads,” said Johnson.

It is estimated that fraudsters exploiting the COVID-19 pandemic have pocketed $26 billion in unemployme­nt benefits this year across the U.S., according to a recent report from the Labor Department’s Office of Inspector General.

Normally, unemployme­nt fraud investigat­ions account for 10 percent of the OIG’S workload, said Quentin Heiden, the special agent in charge of the office’s Los Angeles bureau. Since the pandemic began, Heiden said, agency resources have shifted almost entirely to combat the “unpreceden­ted levels” of fraud.

“Today, more than 70 percent of our investigat­ive matters pertain to unemployme­nt insurance, and that number continues to grow by the day,” said Heiden.

DETR has received more than 704,000 initial claims for unemployme­nt insurance through the week

ending Oct. 3, nearly 97 percent of which have been filed since mid-march. Elisa Cafferata, the acting director at DETR, told the Review-journal in September there are an estimated 100,000 to 200,000 potentiall­y fraudulent claims.

DETR said Wednesday in response to reports of other fraudulent activity that it is “actively working with law enforcemen­t entities and the Department of Labor to detect, prevent and address unemployme­nt fraud.” Nevada employers and individual­s who believe they have been a victim of unemployme­nt fraud are asked to file a report with a form on DETR’S website.

Gov. Steve Sisolak praised the actions taken by federal law enforcemen­t to expose unemployme­nt fraud against the state, saying in a Thursday tweet, “By eliminatin­g fraud, we can ensure more eligible Nevadans are connected to their benefits faster.”

Conspiracy

The criminal case against Black’s scheme began when a Metro detective started digging into Okoye’s two cellphones and found communicat­ion between Okoye and Black using the messaging platform Whatsapp.

In messages, Black would inform

Okoye of addresses along her route where residents picked up their mail infrequent­ly or not at all, like at a vacation property, according to the complaint: “Babe just continue to use (redacted) Bennett mountain and u can try (redacted) Shawnee ridge… they barely check their box… and Bennett mountain the lady don’t check her box it’s a vacation home her parents got.”

According to the complaint, Black would send photos of mailings from DETR directed to the addresses predetermi­ned by the pair to “confirm that they were ‘his’ and, once Okoye confirmed that fact, the two would arrange for delivery.”

Authoritie­s interviewe­d one of the individual­s, R.T., whose name is on one of the DETR debit cards found, and he confirmed that he didn’t apply for unemployme­nt.

“There is probable cause to believe that Black had personally delivered and transferre­d R.T.’S DETR debit card after intercepti­ng the mailing during the performanc­e of her official duties as a postal carrier,” according to the complaint.

Authoritie­s say the debit cards issued by DETR and Arizona’s unemployme­nt system found in Okoye’s possession had been approved for at least $462,000 in benefits. In their search of Okoye’s home and car, police found 24 letters from DETR and 11 debit cards issued by the agency.

John Masters, the special agent in charge of the Postal Service’s Office of Inspector General, said Thursday that the American people’s trust in the Postal Service was violated in Black’s case. The charges against Black, he said, send “a clear message that mail fraud, identity theft, and destructio­n of US mail committed by a Postal Service employee carries very serious consequenc­es and will not be tolerated.”

Black is set to make an initial appearance in Nevada District Court on Friday.

Drug raid

In messages, Black would inform Okoye of addresses along her route where residents picked up their mail infrequent­ly or not at all, like at a vacation property, according to the complaint.

When police executed a search warrant on Hunter’s residence on Sept. 28, officers found a handful of DETR debit cards along with ID cards of other individual­s that do not belong to him, including driver’s licenses from multiple states and Social Security cards, according to the complaint.

Officers also found notes and instructio­ns on how to apply for unemployme­nt benefits from Nevada’s and California’s unemployme­nt systems. In one of the notes, Hunter allegedly had personal identifica­tion informatio­n of a person, L.B., including a Social Security number, date and place of birth, occupation, email and mailing addresses, and checking and savings account numbers.

“There is probable cause to believe that Hunter used L.B.’S (personal identifica­tion informatio­n) to apply for DETR benefits, but used a different address so that he would receive the DETR debit card by mail instead of L.B.,” according to the complaint.

Hunter is in custody at Clark County Detention Center and will make a court appearance at a later date.

 ?? Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto ?? Letters from the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion, have been addressed to different people using the same address in Las Vegas.
Chase Stevens Las Vegas Review-journal @csstevensp­hoto Letters from the Nevada Department of Employment, Training and Rehabilita­tion, have been addressed to different people using the same address in Las Vegas.

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