Beasley assumed the identity of at
least 148 legitimate businesses nationwide, and used those stolen identities to
obtain, on credit, at least $1.4 million in goods and services from various
victims.
Posted By CotoBlogzz
Rancho Santa Margarita, CA – Myrick
Clift Beasley, 56, of Las Vegas, was sentenced today to 60 months in prison for
mail fraud in connection with a scheme to obtain goods and services on credit
using the stolen identities of legitimate, inactive businesses, according to
announcement by Dana J. Boente, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of
Virginia; Paul M. Abbate, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington
Field Office; and Edwin C. Roessler Jr., Chief of the Fairfax County Police
Department.
According to
court documents, from 2010 through 2015, Beasley assumed the identity of at
least 148 legitimate businesses nationwide, and used those stolen identities to
obtain, on credit, at least $1.4 million in goods and services from various
victims.
Beasley admitted that, as part of
the scheme, he would identify inactive, legitimate businesses that had
previously been located in office buildings where virtual office providers were
also located. Beasley admitted that he would assume the inactive
businesses’ identities by renting virtual office space in the buildings in the
names of the legitimate businesses, creating internet domain names and email
addresses in the identified businesses’ names, obtaining phone numbers
previously identified with the businesses when available, and, at times,
supplementing state corporate filings and commercial credit records with
fraudulent information designed to further the scheme.
Beasley admitted that he concealed
his true identity throughout the fraud by using false names and paying for the
costs of operating his scheme with prepaid debit cards. Once he would
assume a business’s identity, Beasley admitted that he would then order goods
and services — particularly, smart phones, computers, and other electronics —
from retailers on credit and have the items shipped to the virtual office
location, which would then, at his direction, re-ship the items to rented
mailboxes elsewhere in the country. Beasley admitted he would then
retrieve the items from the rented mailboxes and sell them.
Beasley has
a history of using his skills to commit fraud. He was convicted for mail fraud
in 1989 and again in 1999.
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