The Sun (San Bernardino)

13 indicted for operating fraudulent unemployme­nt insurance ring

Group faces 39 charges for allegedly stealing IDs — some from prison inmates — and virus relief funds

-

Federal authoritie­s arrested five people Tuesday, allegedly linked to a Los Angeles-based ring that obtained at least $2 million in California unemployme­nt insurance benefits by using stolen identities, some of which belonged to California prison inmates.

The arrests stemmed from a 39-count indictment that charges 13 defendants with using stolen identities to fraudulent­ly obtain unemployme­nt benefits — including pandemic relief funds — mostly during the second half of 2020, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.

The lead defendant in the case is Natalie Le Demola, 37, of Corona, who is serving a life prison sentence for a 2005 murder conviction. Also charged was Carleisha Neosha Plummer, 32, of Los Angeles, who was a close associate of Demola in prison until she was paroled in July 2020, prosecutor­s said.

The federal indictment charges the defendants with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud. According to the indictment, some of the personal informatio­n the defendants illegally obtained was provided by an unnamed prison official employed by the California Department of Correction­s and Rehabilita­tion.

A U.S. Attorney’s Office spokesman had no comment on whether the prison official will face federal charges.

The indictment names various defendants in 31 bank fraud counts and seven aggravated identity theft counts.

Demola, Plummer and other co-conspirato­rs “would acquire the PII (personal identifyin­g informatio­n), such as the names, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers, of individual­s, including identity theft victims, who were not eligible for UI benefits, including pandemic benefits, because they were employed, retired, or incarcerat­ed,” the indictment alleged.

Members of the conspiracy then allegedly used the informatio­n to make fraudulent online applicatio­ns for benefits from the California Employment Developmen­t Department. Once the applicatio­ns were approved, they received EDD-funded debit cards that allowed them to withdraw money from ATMs across Southern California, according to the indictment.

The defendants named in the indictment are:

•Demola, who will be brought to federal court in downtown Los Angeles to face the charges in the case. In 2005, Demola and her former boyfriend, Terry Lee Bell; and a third defendant, Christophe­r Long, were convicted of murdering Demola’s mother in 2001. Demola is imprisoned at the California Institutio­n for Women in Chino.

• Plummer, who was arrested Tuesday.

•Khanshanda King, 31, of Los Angeles, who is still being sought.

• Cleshay Johnson II, 28, of Los Angeles, who is still being sought.

•James Antonio Johnson, who has several aliases including “Big Dawg Niddy,” 31, of Los Angeles, who is currently in custody in a Los Angeles County jail.

•Felicite Aleisha King, 41, of LosAngeles, who is still being sought.

•Shafequah Lynete Mitchell, 33, of LosAngeles, who is currently traveling outside of California.

• Loresha Shamone Davis, 31, of Moreno Valley, who was arrested Tuesday.

• Porsha Latrice Johnson, 32, of Lynwood, who was arrested Tuesday.

• Donisha Lashawn Pace, 38, of South Los Angeles, who was arrested Tuesday.

• Dominique Charmone Martin, 37, of Yucaipa, who is still being sought.

• Mykara Destiny Robertson, 23, of Los Angeles, who is still being sought.

• Amber Jane Wade, 34, of Palmdale, who was arrested Tuesday.

The conspiracy and bank fraud charges each carry a sentence of up to 30 years in federal prison. Aggravated identity theft carries a mandatory two-year consecutiv­e sentence, prosecutor­s said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States