Los Angeles Times

Southland woman guilty in $150-million fake postage scheme

- By Melissa Gomez

A San Gabriel Valley woman who was accused of using counterfei­t postage on tens of millions of packages pleaded guilty Friday to defrauding the United States Postal Service out of more than $150 million.

Lijuan “Angela” Chen, 51, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to defraud the U.S. and one count of using counterfei­t postage, according to a statement from the U.S. Justice Department.

Chen, a resident of Walnut, has been in federal custody since she was arrested in May 2023. A co-defendant, 51-year-old Chuanhua “Hugh” Hu — who authoritie­s say is considered a fugitive hiding in China — has been charged with one count of conspiracy to defraud the U.S., three counts of passing and possessing counterfei­t obligation­s of the U.S. and one count of forging and counterfei­ting postage stamps.

In all, authoritie­s allege that the duo mailed more than 34 million parcels containing counterfei­t postage labels from January 2020 through last May.

According to Chen’s plea deal, she and Hu owned and operated a City of Industryba­sed package shipping company that offered shipping by U.S. Mail for Chinabased logistics businesses.

Hu then began to print duplicate and counterfei­t NetStamps in an effort to cut the cost of postage, authoritie­s allege.

In November 2019, officials say, Hu became aware that federal authoritie­s were investigat­ing, so he fled to China, where he continued to create counterfei­t postage and avoid detection. Federal authoritie­s believe he used a computer program to fabricate shipping labels.

Meanwhile, Chen remained in the San Gabriel Valley, managing the warehouses the two used to ship packages for their business. The pair then began using counterfei­t postage to ship items by U.S. Mail in 2020. Authoritie­s say they would receive packages from China-based companies and apply the fake postage to ship them through the Postal Service.

According to court documents, the red flags raised by fake postage included the reuse of “intelligen­t barcode data” already applied to other mailed packages. Those data are used to prove the labels have been paid for prior to shipping.

Multiple packages shipped by Chen and Hu included counterfei­t Priority Mail postage, authoritie­s said.

Under the terms of Chen’s plea agreement, she will forfeit funds in her bank accounts, insurance policies and real estate in Chino, Chino Hills, Diamond Bar, South El Monte, Walnut and West Covina. She is scheduled to be sentenced in August, and faces up to five years in prison for each count.

“This defendant participat­ed in a fraud scheme that caused massive losses to our nation’s postal service,” U.S. Atty. Martin Estrada said in a statement. “My office will continue to focus on holding fraudsters accountabl­e and bringing justice to victims everywhere.”

 ?? Nam Y. Huh Associated Press ?? FAKE postage was used for millions of packages.
Nam Y. Huh Associated Press FAKE postage was used for millions of packages.

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