Los Angeles Times

Did EDD fraud pay for felon’s Maserati SUV?

Pasadena man charged in jobless benefit scam was found with cash, meth and pricey car.

- By Richard Winton

When Pasadena police pulled over Robert Sloan Mateer behind the wheel of a slick Maserati SUV, they found $ 197,711 in cash, methamphet­amine and a loaded gun without a serial number. They also found 17 unemployme­nt benefit debit cards loaded with tens of thousands of more dollars in various names.

The stack of cards carried more than $ 133,000 for unemployme­nt benefits, issued by California’s Employment Developmen­t Department under the Coronaviru­s Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act passed by Congress in March, according to a five- count federal indictment against Mateer unsealed last month. Many of those cards were in the names of victims of identity theft, according to federal prosecutor­s.

That Maserati was purchased with some of the unemployme­nt insurance benefits the 30- year- old Pasadena man fraudulent­ly obtained by using stolen identities, the indictment alleges.

Mateer is allegedly one of the hundreds behind a billion- dollar- plus fraud that has unfolded this year involving EDD, according to state and federal prosecutor­s. Some of those involved in the scheme are already inmates in state prisons and claims were filed in the names of more 130 Death Row inmates. Bank of America, which handles the cards, has warned that fraud in California’s unemployme­nt benefits system could total $ 2 billion.

McGregor Scott, U. S. attorney for the Eastern District of California, whose off ice investigat­ed the prison fraud for months, said the

problem may be even greater, with preliminar­y federal findings that“billions of dollars were sent out of the state and out of the country by EDD.”

Mateer on Friday appeared in a Los Angeles federal court on charges of possessing at least 15 or more unauthoriz­ed access devices with the intent to defraud, aggravated identity theft, possession with intent to distribute me th amphetamin­e, possession of a firearm in furtheranc­e of a drug traffickin­g crime, and being a felon in possession of ammunition. Along with the cards, police found more than 85 grams of methamphet­amine in the luxury SUV, according to court documents.

Mateer’s attorney could not be reached for comment.

According to the investigat­or’s affidavit, Mateer admitted to obtaining the unemployme­nt benefits debit cards by using “thousands” of identity profiles in his possession. Each debit card was loaded with about $ 14,500.

That money was intended to be distribute­d by the EDD under the CARES Act, which expanded unemployme­nt benefits to cover those who were previously ineligible, including business owners, self- employed workers and independen­t contractor­s, who were put out of business or significan­tly reduced their services because of the COVID- 19 pandemic.

Mateer allegedly admitted to investigat­ors that he withdrew the $ 197,711 in cash found in his Maserati from ATMs across the Los Angeles area, according to the affidavit by postal inspectors, who investigat­ed the case.

It was the second time he made such withdrawal­s. Mateer allegedly withdrew about $ 13,840 from the EDD debit cards in his possession in September, according to the affidavit.

Mateer, a felon, was taken into federal custody on Oct. 21.

He could face up to 17 years to life in prison if convicted of all charges.

 ?? Mark Ralston AFP vi a Getty I mages ?? A MASERATI at the 2017 LA Auto Show. A felon accused of unemployme­nt fraud was found driving one of the brand’s SUVs with nearly $ 200,000 inside.
Mark Ralston AFP vi a Getty I mages A MASERATI at the 2017 LA Auto Show. A felon accused of unemployme­nt fraud was found driving one of the brand’s SUVs with nearly $ 200,000 inside.

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