Orlando Sentinel

Authoritie­s: Greenberg stole IDs of customers

Feds: Ex-Seminole tax collector faces new charges in indictment

- By Jeff Weiner

Former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg used driver’s licenses surrendere­d to his office by customers to create fake identifica­tion cards for himself, according to a newly filed federal indictment.

Greenberg, who resigned and dropped his bid for reelection after an earlier indictment on charges that he stalked a political opponent, now faces four additional charges related to identity theft and the production of false documents, according to an indictment filed Wednesday.

Vincent Citro, Greenberg’s attorney, declined to comment on the new charges. An attorney representi­ng the tax office did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment. Nor did the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida, which is prosecutin­g the case.

According to the charging document, customers visiting tax collector branches that issued driver’s licenses and Florida ID cards would sometimes surrender their old IDs to Greenberg’s staff to be destroyed.

But Greenberg, prosecutor­s now allege, “used his access to the Seminole County Tax Collector’s Office to take surrendere­d driver licenses before they were shredded.”

He then “used the surrendere­d driver licenses that he had taken

to cause fake driver licenses to be produced that had his photograph but the personal informatio­n of the victims whose driver licenses he had taken.”

The indictment indicates that Greenberg produced at least two fake photo IDs for himself — a Puerto Rico driver’s license and a Florida driver’s license — each of which featured his photograph but the name and personal informatio­n of an unknowing customer of his office.

The victims are identified in court paperwork only by their initials. According to the indictment, Greenberg faked the Puerto Rico ID sometime between Sept. 21, 2018, and his June 23 arrest in the stalking case, and faked the Florida ID sometime between Dec. 4 and June 23.

Greenberg, 35, is slated for arraignmen­t on the new charges July 24. He had pleaded not guilty to the stalking-related charges.

Those charges stemmed from an alleged effort to smear Brian Beute, a fine arts teacher at Trinity Preparator­y School in Winter Park and Republican rival of Greenberg’s in the tax collector’s race.

Prosecutor­s said Greenberg posed as concerned students in letters to Trinity Prep that accused Beute of sexual misconduct. Assistant U.S. Attorney Roger Handberg said in court last month that Greenberg’s DNA and fingerprin­ts were found on nine letters sent to the school.

Meanwhile, a Twitter account set up in Beute’s name and a Facebook account that purported to belong to a concerned teacher were traced to the IP address of Greenberg’s home, Handberg said. In addition to seeking to frame him as a sexual abuser, Greenberg tried to portray Beute as “a segregatio­nist and in favor of white supremacy,” officials said.

The school first turned the letters over to the Seminole Sheriff ’s Office. But investigat­ors determined they were written by an adult, not a student. Because they were delivered though the U.S. Mail, the case was turned over to federal investigat­ors with the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

Beute was cleared of any wrongdoing.

Earlier this week, attorneys for Greenberg filed a court motion seeking more informatio­n from the U.S. Attorney’s Office about the stalking-related charges. Specifical­ly, they asked for the name of the victim, who is not identified in the indictment and is only referred to as a “school employee” and “political opponent.” Greenberg’s attorneys also asked to see the social media posts he is charged with creating.

Greenberg’s attorneys also said that they had tried to meet with investigat­ors for months before his surprise arrest, but those requests were denied.

The filing says agents searched Greenberg’s home on the morning he was arrested and took communicat­ions with his attorney, an electronic device used by a 3-year-old, birth certificat­es, Social Security cards and other documents belonging to Greenberg and his family.

Greenberg — who had survived a slew of controvers­ies during his brief time in office, from an Orlando Sentinel exposé on bigmoney contracts doled out to friends, to an incident in which he used flashing white lights to pull over a motorist — resigned the day after his arrest in late June.

He soon also withdrew his bid for re-election. Remaining Republican candidates Beute and J.R. Kroll, a real estate broker, will face each other in their party’s Aug. 18 primary, with the winner taking on Democrat Lynn Moira Dictor on November’s general election ballot.

 ?? JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL ?? Former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg, who resigned and dropped his bid for reelection after an earlier indictment on charges that he stalked a political opponent, now faces four additional charges related to identity theft and the production of false documents, according to an indictment filed Wednesday.
JOE BURBANK/ORLANDO SENTINEL Former Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg, who resigned and dropped his bid for reelection after an earlier indictment on charges that he stalked a political opponent, now faces four additional charges related to identity theft and the production of false documents, according to an indictment filed Wednesday.

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