Drugs can turn anyone into a monster, and when you compound a narcotics addiction with existing mental health problems, it’s advisable to be prepared for the worst. The Fairborn Daily Herald walks readers through a pair of drug-addled Ohio residents’ descent into a life of crime, to fund their methamphetamine habit. (The ‘not thinking straight’ defense was quite an understatement.)The two went to great lengths to steal and sell people’s identities, committing a lengthy list of crimes with far-reaching and devastating effects.
The report traces how the pair, a man and a woman, illegally collected an abundance of people’s identities, by stealing everything from birth certificates and marriage licenses to social security numbers, tax forms, checks and credit cards. (Scam-a-lam-ding-dong!)
But the manner in which they got their hands on people’s private information was just as invasive as the act itself. According to one victim, who spoke emotionally during a court hearing, the addicts completely bulldozed her family’s sense of security when they stole a car and other items from their home. The victim testified about the larger social effect of such violations, alleging that the female defendant’s teenage son, who was pulled into the scam, once described the thrill of violating innocent citizens as “the best time of his life,” in a formal statement to a detective. (“Can we play ‘Robbers and Frauders’ again, mom?”)
By the time they were caught, the female defendant had amassed more than 20 charges, ranging from burglary, theft and forgery to receiving stolen property and engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity. She pleaded guilty to 13 of the 21 charges and her attorney offered an apology on her behalf, attributing the violations to serious drug abuse and other mental health issues. (And yet she chose to remain silent in the hearing.)
Ultimately, the defendants were each sentenced to 16 years in prison, and the woman was ordered to pay about $19,000 in restitution to the people she victimized. (If only she could also restore her victims’ sense of safety in their own homes.)
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