The Des Moines Register

5-year sentence in store for scammer

- Reader’s Watchdog Lee Rood Reach Lee Rood at lrood@registerme­dia.com, at 515-284-8549, or on X at @leerood.

A Des Moines man who has scammed women on dating apps for most of his adult life will receive a fiveyear sentence for violating his probation tied to conviction­s in two Iowa counties.

John F. Clarke, 55, signed documents admitting that he violated probation by leaving the state, getting fired from his job without telling his probation officer and missing appointmen­ts with the officer. The five-year prison sentence will be for violations in Polk and Linn counties.

Clarke faces a total of 15 years total behind bars for the same alleged probation violations in Black Hawk County in a case that has not yet been resolved.

Clarke also is scheduled for trial April 29 on charges of felony theft after allegedly stealing 10 lotto scratch tickets from a Hy-Vee Fast & Fresh where he worked, court records say. And he's being investigat­ed by the FBI on a referral from the U.S. Attorney's Office, court records show.

Clarke was featured in a Watchdog column on Valentine's Day after he'd been outed by many of his victims in Facebook chats and amassed a stack of complaints to Iowa's attorney general and local law enforcemen­t agencies in at least six Iowa counties and five states. He had never served much time behind bars despite numerous conviction­s, and was arrested in December at a Marshallto­wn bar after some of his victims leaned hard on law enforcemen­t to take action.

Clarke, who is being held in the Polk County Jail, could not be reached for comment.

Clarke's modus operandi was well documented in reams of court cases: Gain the trust of single women; pose as an employee of a cellphone company; gain access to their phones, service plans and credit; and use their resources to purchase electronic­s, including cellphones and Apple watches, that were later sold or pawned.

His long rap sheet includes conviction­s in Johnson, Linn, Marshall, Polk and Story counties in Iowa and numerous counts of theft, identity theft, forgery and parole violations. Though he's labeled a habitual offender under Iowa law, judges and prosecutor­s let him take plea deals allowing for probation or short stints in jail, only to have him commit more crimes, court records show.

Two women who lived hundreds of miles apart, near Columbia, Missouri, and Madison, Wisconsin, both told police prior to his arrest that Clarke also worked his dating app scam on them. He admitted traveling last fall outside Iowa, but denied he committed any new crimes in the stipulatio­n he signed in Polk County.

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