Los Angeles Times

Man is sentenced in scam targeting the elderly

Defendant gets four years in prison for helping defraud 70 victims of $2 million.

- By Teri Figueroa Figueroa writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A Los Angeles-area man who acted as a mule in a scam that swindled $2 million from elderly people across the country was sentenced to nearly four years in prison, the U.S. attorney’s office in San Diego said.

Jack Owuor, 25, pleaded guilty in San Diego federal court in March to a racketeeri­ng charge for his role in the scheme, federal prosecutor­s said in a news release. In what is commonly called a “grandparen­t scam,” the victims — usually in their 70s or 80s — are tricked into sending money to help a relative or family in legal trouble. Often, the victims are told the money will help keep their loved one out of jail.

The eight defendants in this scheme — the type of scam that U.S. District Judge Cathy Ann Bencivengo called “heartbreak­ingly evil” in court Wednesday — were indicted in July 2021 in San Diego federal court.

Six have since pleaded guilty. Owuor was the first to be sentenced. The other two defendants — both Florida residents — remain at large.

According to prosecutor­s and court filings, more than 70 people across the country were swindled out of more than $2 million. That includes at least 10 victims in San Diego County who lost a total of more than $300,000.

In their sentencing brief, prosecutor­s said Owuor personally handled cash pickups from at least seven victims in California and recruited other mules. His defense attorney wrote in court documents that Owuor, a resident of Paramount, did not understand the depth of what he was involved in.

Given a 46-month prison sentence, Owuor also was ordered to forfeit the $4,300 he personally made in the scam and pay restitutio­n of $434,600.

The indictment alleges the San Diego-area victims lived in areas including Bonita and Oceanside. Among them was an 87-year-old woman who in May 2020 was tricked by a woman pretending to be her granddaugh­ter, saying she needed $9,000 bail money after a serious car crash. The victim provided the money, and her granddaugh­ter’s “attorney” warned the victim to stay mum because a judge had issued a “gag order.”

Over the next week, the fraudsters made two additional demands that totaled $99,000.

The bail-money request was an oft-repeated scam, with victim after victim paying up and keeping quiet in places such as New York, Georgia and California from November 2019 to October 2020.

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