National Post

Canadian accused of sibling identity theft

Allegedly using dead brother’s name in U.S.

- By triStin HoPPer

Seven years ago, Canadian telecommun­ications engineer Leslie Camick appears to have been ready for a change. He was weighed down by back taxes, behind in child support payments a nd, thanks to a string of drunk driving charges, unable to drive, according to U.S. federal prosecutor­s.

So, he allegedly picked up the birth certificat­e of his dead

infant brother Wayne, slipped over the U.S. border, took up with a Kansas woman he first met in the Cayman Islands and settled in to build a multimilli­on-dollar telecommun­ications empire.

Next month, in a Wichita courtroom, Leslie “Wayne” Camick is set to go over the details of how it all came crashing down.

For years, Mr. Camick lived a life his brother “never had the opportunit­y to enjoy,” U.S. prosecutor­s poetically told a Kansas court hearing in late September, according to The Associated Press.

Wayne Bently Camick died at 14 weeks in 1958.

Starting in 2006, however, the infant’s name suddenly began reappearin­g on contracts, immigratio­n forms bank accounts, driver’s licences and patent documents all throughout the United States.

In 2007, a Wayne b. camick of Mandeville, Louisiana, patented a device to protect optical cables. In the promotiona­l material for a company making devices to inspect utility poles, telephone engineer Wayne b. camick praises their accuracy.

At about the same time, a Wayne b. camick, together with live-in girlfriend Lyn Wattley, were laying the foundation­s of the Winfield, Kansas-based telecommun­ications firm KaiTraxx LLc.

by Mr. camick’s own assertion the company was pulling in $1-million a year in profits by 2008. by 2011, despite the effects of the recession, profits were up to $2.5-million.

but the whole ruse apparently began to unravel in the summer of 2011, when Ms. Wattley, “discovered camick had had been lying … about his true identity,” according to U.S. authoritie­s quoted in September by AP.

A single terse statement on KaiTraxx’s website records the event thusly: “Lyle ‘Wayne’ camick was removed from associatio­n with this company as of 13th July 2011.”

On Nov. 19, Mr. camick, 58, now back to using the name Leslie, will answer to a raft of charges, first laid in March, of mail fraud, immigratio­n document fraud, bank fraud, “aggravated” identity theft and even violations of the U.S. Patriot Act.

The post 9/11 U.S. justice system is not inclined to look kindly on foreign nationals assuming false identities, and altogether, Mr. camick is facing enough charges to put

him in jail for the rest of his life.

Mr. camick’s theory — at least, the one he is trying to prove in civil court — is that Ms. Wattley is “clearly seeking control of Mr. camick’s assets.”

In a 19-page complaint filed in July, Mr. camick alleges that he was working with a crew in Arizona in July, 2011, when an irate Ms. Wattley, upset over some earlier “financial disagreeme­nts,” suddenly cancelled his cell phone, fuel card and bank card.

She then allegedly reported his GMc truck, which was in her name, had been reported stolen.

The report got Mr. camick arrested and detained in deming, New Mexico, although the charges were ultimately dropped when the “alleged victim in the case did not wish to proceed with prosecutio­n,” according to a local media report.

Only two months later, however, Mr. camick was again arrested in Galloway, New Jersey, for being a “fugitive from justice from Kansas,” according to an official police blotter.

This time, immigratio­n authoritie­s became involved, and after four days, Mr. camick revealed his real name and explained that he had begun using his dead brother’s birth certificat­e because “he owed taxes in canada and was unable to obtain a canadian passport or other travel documents,” according to U.S. sources quoted in federal court documents.

Ultimately, Mr. camick’s complaint asserts that Ms. Wattley has “given evidence to … have [him] deported so that she could acquire all of his assets.”

Not just KaiTraxx, he notes, but also a patent for a locking manhole cover whose value he estimates at “five billion dollars.”

In July, Mr. camick’s lawyer attempted to have the federal identity fraud charges lifted on the basis that Mr. camick “has always gone by” the name Wayne in the United States.

As for the birth certificat­e, “there is no law that prohibits a brother from having a copy of a family member’s birth certificat­e in his possession,” reads court documents.

Neverthele­ss, after noting the sheer volume of official documents Mr. camick had signed with “Wayne b. camick,” a judge concluded that he had not adopted the Wayne moniker simply because he liked “the sound of that name.”

“It is notable that camick has still supplied no innocent explanatio­n for why he has used the false name within the United States,” wrote district of Kansas Justice Thomas Marten.

Mr. camick reportedly lived in London, Ont., prior to moving to the United States, although he appears to have been a student at the University of Guelph in 1980.

In October of 1999, a Leslie camick of the same age was also sentenced to six months in jail after he was caught drunk driving near Owen Sound, Ont.

At the time, it was the driver’s fourth impaired driving conviction — and his seventh for driving while disqualifi­ed.

 ?? SedGWIcK cOUNTy SHerIff ?? Leslie “Wayne” Camick
SedGWIcK cOUNTy SHerIff Leslie “Wayne” Camick

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