Lodi News-Sentinel

How an LA marriage fraud scheme helped hundreds of people obtain green cards

- Karabatur

It was a midsummer day in 2021 when Engilbert Ulan met with a newlywed couple in Los Angeles to help them prepare for questions they expected to face from United States Citizenshi­p and Immigratio­n Services.

The husband, a 53-yearold foreign national, had begun the process of applying for a green card and needed to pass an interview scheduled for a few days later. He and his wife, a U.S. citizen, would have to prove their marriage was legitimate.

Ulan moved them through the list of 211 possible questions that his boss, Marcialito “Mars” Biol Benitez, had provided.

“What is the color of your spouse’s toothbrush?” Ulan asked. “Who sleeps on the right side of the bed?”

But according to federal prosecutor­s, Ulan knew the couple’s marriage was bogus. By then, authoritie­s say, he had already met with hundreds of Benitez’s clients, who were recruited by brokers in a prolific marriage fraud scheme.

The clients, many of whom were Brazilian nationals, paid up to $30,000 in cash for Benitez’s services.

Ulan, 42, was convicted last week by a federal jury in Boston of conspiracy to commit marriage fraud and immigratio­n document fraud. He now faces up to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The 49-year-old Benitez, who pleaded guilty in August to orchestrat­ing the marriage fraud enterprise, testified against his former employee and could ultimately receive a shorter sentence than Ulan.

Ulan’s attorney, Joseph Simons, called Benitez “the architect of the arranged marriage business,” and said his client, a Philippine national who resided in Pasadena, only played a small part in the operation.

“The evidence as I saw it painted Mr. Ulan as a hardworkin­g man who came to the United States looking for a better life, and who took the opportunit­y to help support his family back in the Philippine­s,” Simons said. “Unfortunat­ely for Mr. Ulan, he trusted his then-boss, and perhaps unwittingl­y ended up taking a minor role in his fraudulent immigratio­n scheme.”

Ulan was the 10th person to be convicted in the case, with nine other co-defendants pleading guilty. His sentencing is scheduled for March.

Jodi Cohen, special agent in charge of the FBI’s Boston division, said in a statement that Ulan’s conviction should “serve as a warning” to others who commit marriage fraud.

“It is the utmost honor and privilege to become an American citizen, but Engilbert Ulan made an absolute sham of that process,” Cohen said. “Mr. Ulan and his co-conspirato­rs broke immigratio­n laws that are in place to protect public safety and created an unfair disadvanta­ge for those seeking to earn their citizenshi­p lawfully.”

Authoritie­s said that Ulan’s former boss, Benitez, operated his marriage fraud “agency,” between October 2016 and March 2022. Benitez, a Filipino national who resided in Los Angeles, called his company Career Ad Management LLC. The business operated from offices at 3325 Wilshire Blvd., prosecutor­s said, and arranged more than 300 “sham marriages” to help clients obtain green cards.

Court records show Benitez, Ulan, and others involved in the conspiracy had a blueprint for faking their clients’ marriages. Benitez used “brokers” to recruit U.S. citizens to serve as spouses for foreigners seeking lawful permanent residence status, while Ulan and others helped identify foreign nationals through “referrals from previous clients and by word of mouth.”

Ulan assisted with introducto­ry meetings that explained the scheme to the clients, and would would also introduce the prospectiv­e couples to each other, federal prosecutor­s said.

The clients received payment schedules from Benitez that explained both the upfront costs and monthly payments that were expected to follow. The former covered the client’s wedding ceremony and the filing of immigratio­n documents, while the latter aimed to keep the fake “spouse” reachable and cooperativ­e until the client obtained their green card.

Benitez’s employees would take the fake spouses to clothing stores to “select suitable outfits for wedding ceremonies,” prosecutor­s said, and Ulan assisted with booking the couples’ marriage ceremony appointmen­ts.

The ceremonies were held at wedding chapels that did not check whether the marriages were legitimate, prosecutor­s said, and Ulan frequently used one where he had an associate who was a parttime employee. Ulan and others decorated the chapels with “prop wedding decoration­s,” taking photograph­s to document the ceremonies.

Ulan would help prepare fraudulent petitions and supporting documentat­ion on the clients’ behalf, then submit the paperwork for processing. Clients were advised to open joint bank accounts, register vehicles, purchase life insurance policies and file taxes jointly with their fake spouses, federal prosecutor­s said.

Clients who lived outside of California and needed to show residency in the state paid Ulan and others to use their physical addresses and mailboxes. One client, a foreign national residing in Massachuse­tts, paid $100 to Ulan monthly for using his address on immigratio­n and other official documents, federal prosecutor­s said.

“Everything should be addressed in the address where you both live, which is my address,” Ulan told the client, according to court records.

Ulan also ensured “couples/spouses [showed] GOOD CHEMISTRY during the interview,” by instructin­g them to provide consistent answers to questions posed by immigratio­n authoritie­s, prosecutor­s said in his indictment.

The couples were coached to conceal the fraudulent nature of the marriages, court records show, with Ulan finishing up the practice interviews with questions that authoritie­s might use to trick them, such as “How much did you pay for your spouse in this marriage?”

 ?? U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE/TNS ?? Undated photos provided by federal prosecutor­s show what they described as “staged wedding ceremonies” arranged by a group in California.
U.S. DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE/TNS Undated photos provided by federal prosecutor­s show what they described as “staged wedding ceremonies” arranged by a group in California.
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