Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

8,000 victims net con artist six-year term

- LINDA SATTER

A stack of victim-impact statements towering at least 2 feet high sat on a table in a Little Rock federal courtroom Wednesday, representi­ng just some of at least 8,000 people in Arkansas and other states who have been tricked out of more than $2.4 million by con artists pretending to collect debts on behalf of the U.S. government.

The money was stolen largely from society’s most vulnerable segments, Assistant U.S. Attorney Hunter Bridges told U.S. District Judge Billy Roy Wilson, who was preparing to sentence one of the con artists indicted in Arkansas in 2016.

Bridges described the victims as elderly people who were tricked into turning over their life savings; poor people who had set aside money to buy medicine; people whose immigratio­n statuses were questionab­le; patients who had recently undergone surgery and were in a foggy state of mind; and veterans.

“They were from all walks of life,” he said of the victims of the scam that has resulted in 10 people being indicted in the Eastern District of Arkansas since June 2016.

While the amount of money stolen by the group indicted in Little Rock has reached $2,492,993.50 at last count and Bridges said the number of victims grows each month. Several more defendants have been indicted in other federal jurisdicti­ons, and the scam is believed to be still going on.

“Rarely do we find a fraud scheme that so directly affects the victims,” he said, noting that in many federal fraud cases, the victims are corporatio­ns rather that individual­s.

As far as the sentencing Wednesday of Dennis Delgado Caballero, 40, of Miami, who was one of the first two people indicted in Arkansas, and who pleaded guilty in May 2017 to wire-fraud conspiracy, Bridges said the government agreed with a “time served” recommenda­tion from defense attorney Molly Sullivan of the federal public defender’s office.

Sullivan said that in the 2½ years that Caballero has been in custody, he hasn’t seen his family. She noted that his children and his ex-wife, who has agreed to “take him back,” live in Miami.

She also noted that Caballero, who is from Cuba, isn’t a U.S. citizen, but that he has permanent residency and may be eligible for asylum if the government tries to deport him.

Earlier in the hearing, Wilson had said that federal sentencing guidelines recommende­d 78 to 97 months in prison for Caballero, based on the number of victims and the defendants’ claim to represent a government agency. But after the hearing was briefly closed to the public, Bridges said the new sentencing range was 42 to 53 months, and that the government “strongly agreed” to sentence Caballero below the range.

Wilson, however, refused to accept the recommenda­tions, instead sentencing Caballero to 72 months — or six years — in prison. He said the new top range “is far below what I would have given without a motion for reduction,” and noted that the sixyear sentence “is substantia­lly below what I had thought of” doing.

Caballero sat listening to the proceeding­s and responding to questions with the aid of an interprete­r.

Bridges said the scheme was carried out by two groups of people — those who pretended to be government officials and placed telephone calls directing people to immediatel­y pay a tax debt or face arrest or a civil lawsuit by day’s end, and those who were dispatched by the callers to retrieve the money from wire-transfer machines, usually in a Walmart, in other states. He said those indicted in Arkansas were the collectors.

Agents have said the victims were always told to wire the money to another state in which it would be collected by an IRS official who was standing by.

Wilson said he was “astounded” by the the scam’s reach and the number of people who “got duped.”

“Is the word not getting out to the public that this is going on?” he asked.

Bridges replied, “This is a numbers game. These schemes pop up faster than you can shut them down.”

While the scammers can reach thousands of people in an hour’s time, it takes much longer for the authoritie­s to catch up with them, he said.

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