Some people engage in religious activities to absolve their sins and cultivate spiritual connections with higher powers. And then there are those who see organized religion as an opportunity to victimize vulnerable, god-fearing folk. The Daily Leader reports on a pair of women in Mississippi who targeted elderly and disabled victims at their place of worship, stealing their identities and filing fraudulent income tax returns on their behalf. (Prison gates, not pearly gates for them.)
The deliberateness in which these crooked congregants operated is enough to drive even the most pious person to the confessional. One of the women led the effort to get into the good graces of her fellow churchgoers, extracting identifying information from them. The other filed fraudulent federal income tax returns with the IRS that heavily inflated the victims’ financial statuses, including information related to their wages, income, tax deductions and credits. (Given that they preyed on elderly and handicapped individuals, who probably were living off of fixed incomes or long-term disability benefits, this had to raise a few red flags.)Together they collected nearly $500,000 in income tax refunds before the IRS Criminal Investigation agents yanked them from the pulpit.
Both women were charged by the Assistant U.S. Attorney General and convicted of knowingly conspiring with one another to defraud the IRS, by obtaining and aiding each other to obtain the payment of a fraudulent claim. In addition to being ordered to repay $493,111 to the IRS (that’s a lot of stolen grannies), they are each serving multiple years in prison, to be followed by three years of probation. (By pure coincidence, both of their prison names happen to be “Judas.”) Judas #1 received a 30 month prison sentence for exploiting the information she’d taken from the parishioners. Judas #2 was given 30 months plus two, for physically carrying out federal tax fraud, when she doctored and submitted false claims.
These women willingly preyed on old and sick people, whom were just looking for a little hope – so here’s to hoping! Hoping that these ugly social sinners rediscover a righteous calling in prison.
The post Social Sinners appeared first on Fraud of the Day.