Prison Inmate Accused of Orchestrating $11 Million Fraud Using Cell Cellphone (theregister.com) 75
An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Register: On June 8, 2020, an individual claiming to be billionaire film producer and philanthropist Sidney Kimmel contacted brokerage Charles Schwab by phone and stated that he had uploaded a wire disbursement form using the service's secure email service. The only problem was the call apparently came from prison. Still, the caller made reference to a transfer verification inquiry earlier that day by his wife -- a role said to have been played by a female co-conspirator. The individual allegedly posing as Kimmel had contacted a Schwab customer service representative three days earlier -- on June 5, 2020 -- about opening a checking account, and was told that a form of identification and a utility bill would be required. On June 6, a co-conspirator is alleged to have provided a picture of Kimmel's driver's license and a Los Angeles Water and Power utility bill. According to court documents [PDF] filed by the US Attorney's Office in the Northern District of Georgia, the uploaded documents consisted of a request for funds to be wired to an external bank and a forged letter of authorization -- both of which appeared to be signed by Kimmel.
On June 9, satisfied that Kimmel had been adequately authenticated, the brokerage sent $11 million from Kimmel's Schwab account to a Zions Bank account for Money Metal Exchange, LLC, an Eagle, Idaho-based seller of gold coins and other precious metals. The real Kimmel had no knowledge of the transaction, which resulted in the purchase of 6,106 American Eagle gold coins. The individual who orchestrated the fraudulent purchase of the coins is alleged to have hired a private security firm on June 13, 2020 to transport the coins from Boise, Idaho to Atlanta, Georgia on a chartered plane. An associate of the fraudster allegedly took possession of the coins three days later. All the while the alleged mastermind, Arthur Lee Cofield Jr, was incarcerated in a maximum security prison in Butts County, Georgia, according to the government. Cofield is serving a 14-year sentence for armed robbery and is also under indictment in Fulton County, Georgia for attempted murder.
The day after the coins were purchased, prison staff are said to have searched Cofield's cell and recovered a blue Samsung cellphone hidden under his arm. The prison forensic unit apparently determined that Cofield had been using an account on free voice and messaging service TextNow and matched the phone number with calls made to Money Metals Exchange. On December 8, 2020, a federal grand jury indicted Cofield and two co-conspirators for conspiracy to commit bank fraud and money laundering. Cofield's attorney, Steven Sadow, subsequently sought to suppress the cellphone evidence on Fourth Amendment grounds, arguing that the warrantless search of the device by prison officials was unrelated to the legitimate function of prison security and maintenance. The government said otherwise, insisting that Cofield does not have standing to contest the search, having no "legitimate expectation of privacy in the contents of a contraband cell phone." The judge overseeing the case sided with the government [PDF] and certified the case to proceed to trial.
On June 9, satisfied that Kimmel had been adequately authenticated, the brokerage sent $11 million from Kimmel's Schwab account to a Zions Bank account for Money Metal Exchange, LLC, an Eagle, Idaho-based seller of gold coins and other precious metals. The real Kimmel had no knowledge of the transaction, which resulted in the purchase of 6,106 American Eagle gold coins. The individual who orchestrated the fraudulent purchase of the coins is alleged to have hired a private security firm on June 13, 2020 to transport the coins from Boise, Idaho to Atlanta, Georgia on a chartered plane. An associate of the fraudster allegedly took possession of the coins three days later. All the while the alleged mastermind, Arthur Lee Cofield Jr, was incarcerated in a maximum security prison in Butts County, Georgia, according to the government. Cofield is serving a 14-year sentence for armed robbery and is also under indictment in Fulton County, Georgia for attempted murder.
The day after the coins were purchased, prison staff are said to have searched Cofield's cell and recovered a blue Samsung cellphone hidden under his arm. The prison forensic unit apparently determined that Cofield had been using an account on free voice and messaging service TextNow and matched the phone number with calls made to Money Metals Exchange. On December 8, 2020, a federal grand jury indicted Cofield and two co-conspirators for conspiracy to commit bank fraud and money laundering. Cofield's attorney, Steven Sadow, subsequently sought to suppress the cellphone evidence on Fourth Amendment grounds, arguing that the warrantless search of the device by prison officials was unrelated to the legitimate function of prison security and maintenance. The government said otherwise, insisting that Cofield does not have standing to contest the search, having no "legitimate expectation of privacy in the contents of a contraband cell phone." The judge overseeing the case sided with the government [PDF] and certified the case to proceed to trial.
Jammer (Score:2)
These are pretty physically restricted area's usually in some geographical isolation zone, jam the fucking things!
Prisoners don't need them, and the staff should be doing their jobs instead of hanging out with fuckoff book all day,
what about lowering the cost of prison phones? (Score:2)
what about lowering the cost of prison phones?
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what about treating prisoners like prisoners?
I am not saying be cruel or inhumane, but for fuck sake, these are contraband phones. If a prisoner wishes to make a phone call they can wait in line to use the monitored land line, if that's a heartache ... well maybe they shouldn't be robbing people at gunpoint (which I do have experience with a couple times cause I had the audacity to be walking to my apartment at the time)
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so your fine with a convicted arm robber having a contraband phone to commit more crime from inside prison, got it
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i'm fine with people in prison being treated as people and having some privacy, yes.
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Even if they steal people's arms?
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Joking apart, people in prison should have rights, yes.
eg. The right to not be raped daily, which seems to be standard practice in US prisons.
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so, weekly?
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Well played...
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they can have as many phones as they want, if you read my op I said jam the signals but thanks for not bothering to read
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speak for yourself
Re:what about lowering the cost of prison phones? (Score:4, Insightful)
they can wait in line to use the monitored land line
The landline requires the prisoner to have money in their commissary account. They are expensive to use, and many inmates can't afford them.
Prisoners who maintain social ties with their families and communities are less likely to re-offend. That's bad for business if you run a prison or a guard union.
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The concern is more about the price gouging and monopolistic practices. This is the 21st century, under normal circumstances, most people don't even pay per minute charges even for international calls any more unless they have an accident with their phone or are just so rich that they don't even care if they're not using VOIP for the call. Just because people are in prison should not give anyone free license to abuse them by charging literally hundreds of times what it really costs to make a phone call.
Re: what about lowering the cost of prison phones? (Score:2)
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I'm not even going to go into whether ridiculous make-work like breaking rocks has any value at all in rehabilitation. I'm just curious if you're suggesting that prisoners should be breaking rocks during every waking moment with no downtime? Because while the former is ethically dubious at best, the latter would simply be a form of torture and slow execution.
Re: what about lowering the cost of prison phones (Score:2)
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I was about 50/50 on whether it was sarcasm or not. Tone of voice does not really transfer through written messages well. Conveying it through text is a special talent of good writers. So sarcasm tags are quite useful. In the end, it was either ask or just go ahead and reply, so I went ahead and replied because, even if it was sarcasm on your part, I've known plenty of people whose attitudes match that completely non-sarcastically.
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most people wont stick a gun in your face outside of your house and take your wallet, phone, and keys
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That's a fine argument for making the prison phones cheaper but in no way does that apply to contraband cell phones. These phones aren't smuggled in to be used to call loved ones back home and tuck them into bed.
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These phones aren't smuggled in to be used to call loved ones back home
Actually, that is one of the reasons.
If you have a cellphone, you can rent it out by the minute for money, favors, or loyalty.
You can profitably charge less than the official phones, and your customers can talk with no one snooping.
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they can wait in line to use the monitored land line
The landline requires the prisoner to have money in their commissary account. They are expensive to use, and many inmates can't afford them.
Prisoners who maintain social ties with their families and communities are less likely to re-offend. That's bad for business if you run a prison or a guard union.
Yet another reason prisons shouldn't be a business. If someone has done something bad enough that they need to be isolated from society, the state (ergo, the people in a democratic nation) should take on that burden. That way we aren't locking people up for minor crimes and misdemeanours because it's profitable.
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Only 8% of America's prisons are private.
Private prisons are a bad idea, but they are not the main cause of our dysfunctional criminal justice system.
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Only 8% may be fully private, but I think you'll find that a lot more are public/private. I.E. the government owns the prisons, but various private companies run various parts of the prison. For example commissaries, phone, tv, food service are often contracted out. Even when the prisoners are the ones handling food service, chances are that they're actually working for a private company that has a contract with the prison. Many public prisons also have public/private arrangements for guards and other staff
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Only 8% of America's prisons are private.
Private prisons are a bad idea, but they are not the main cause of our dysfunctional criminal justice system.
I understand what you're saying and that's a good point.
However a business is not solely private. You can have government departments that are run like businesses. Sometimes this is a good thing, a lot of countries around the world run their utilities or other departments as if they were private businesses to cut political interference and red tape, essentially as a private businesses that has one shareholder (the govt). For prisons it isn't a good idea. Prisons should be a burden in a free society, some
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they can wait in line to use the monitored land line
The landline requires the prisoner to have money in their commissary account. They are expensive to use, and many inmates can't afford them.
They should self-finance. So the cost should be tied to the cost of the actual phone, the monthly bill to get a landline, plus the cost associated to having someone monitoring the conversation live if required, or the cost of the recording equipment.
But yes, in the end, it shouldn't be too expensive.
And there shouldn't be waiting lines. If there are, just raise the price and get more phones + lines until the supply matches the demand.
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They should self-finance. So the cost should be tied to the cost of the actual phone, the monthly bill to get a landline, plus the cost associated to having someone monitoring the conversation live if required, or the cost of the recording equipment.
While that would show great entrepreneurial spirit, somehow don't think that the prisons would go for it. Also, the ones with the hidden cell phones are actually usually doing exactly what you suggest, minus the monitoring.
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They have phones, the argument is they are too expensive - NOT ACCESS.
Maybe, the family members the prisoners are sooo keen to talk with while incarcerated could scratch up a few bucks and put it in their relative's commissary account? Oh wait, let me guess, their families can't afford to put money in their account, the prisoner can't afford to put money in their account, so the state needs to provide free (so-called) Obama Phones to inmates and their families because, well, it seems like the right thing to
Re: what about lowering the cost of prison phones? (Score:3)
The guards often are the ones who smuggle them in for inmates.
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The guards often are the ones who smuggle them in for inmates.
Often against their will. Prisoners have a knack for finding out where they live and threatening their families.
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In some countries prisoners do have access to communications and the internet. In those countries prison is focused on rehabilitation, rather than punishment. The goal is to turn that person into a productive member of society who won't reoffend. Maintaining family ties and slowly re-integrating with society before release is one of the ways they do that.
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These are pretty physically restricted area's usually in some geographical isolation zone, jam the fucking things!
A much better option would be to install wire mesh in the buildings to create a Faraday cage and to drop the price of phone calls.
Honestly, for-profit prisons are driving this behavior by doing absolutely nothing to help reform inmates to become productive members of society. The cruelty and indifference shown to prisoners on a daily basis only ensures they will continue their criminality... and that is the point of it in the first place.
Re: Jammer (Score:2)
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Elizabeth Holmes was convicted in January but hasn't been to prison yet. It seems to be really hard to get rich white ladies to their actual sentencing hearings for some reason.
Im curious about your sample size - as I recall, Martha Stewart got shuffled off into prison fairly quickly.
I think she should write a book about how to make crime pay because it has really paid off for her so far.
Yes, she has a lot of black turtleneck shirts and the promise of spending the next few years in prison, away from her child - pretty sure anything she earned from Thanos will be used to compensate those she defrauded, and her prospects for employment after prison are great!
It's a shame you can't even wait for her sentence to be handed down to complain about her lack of punishment for her crimes.
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Sentencing shouldn't take this long. The delays built into our legal system are literally unconstitutional.
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...pretty sure anything she earned from Thanos will be used to compensate those she defrauded, and her prospects for employment after prison are great!
Hmm, I wouldn't think she earned anything directly. He does not seem to me to be the sort to pay bills.
Re: Smarter than most US venture capitalists (Score:2)
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I think she technically got prison for obstruction of justice and was never convicted on the insider trading charges. They got her for the coverup.
Re: Smarter than most US venture capitalists (Score:2)
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There certainly is something to be said for not dragging it out and tying up the courts unnecessarily.
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10 months.
One thing we can be sure of.... (Score:1)
The guy is in prison. (Score:2)
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I'd like to buy some gold and send it to Georgia on a plane. Can you please send me $11 million? Thanks.
Not that Georgia the other one.
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Also people really don't like it when you point out that billionaires only donate money for self-serving reasons. It's one of those things where it really pulls back the curtains on how terrible a place the world really is and nobody wants to look at right in the eye and face it.
It's like that line from the old Batman comics when the evil version of Batman turned evil, you look into the darknes
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Maybe America could use some of that money to provide decent healthcare, but I'm not going to hold my breath.
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I think the Widow Jobs would disagree, and the recently divorced Melinda Gates might want to chime in...
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Kind of sorry he got caught...
That was my initial response too. And if this was a movie instead of a real-life story, the prisoner would be the protagonist and most of the audience would be rooting for him.
My second thought was "Too bad - a guy this smart and resourceful could have made a good life for himself legally. Which is not necessarily to say that he could have done it morally - which kind of goes to the point of the rest of your post.
The victim was made whole (Score:2)
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Per TFA (The TFS copied most but not all of the article verbatim), Schwab considered this unauthorized activity and reimbursed the victim. That's a heck of a loss to take.
Let's not forget it was also a heck of a stupid mistake to just send $11M on such thin approval, I'm fairly certain the banker that processed the trade cut some corners for such an important customer...
No mention of how the phone call "apparently came from prison" but that sure should be a red flag.
And since the prisoner was using a smuggled cell phone, how was Schwab to know the call "was from prison"?
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And since the prisoner was using a smuggled cell phone, how was Schwab to know the call "was from prison"?
Excellent point.
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About half of inmates (Score:2, Insightful)
I hear that sometimes prisons are just hatred factories, and in such a case having a legit smartphone could be a window of opportunity. Perhaps these smartphones could be also monitored? Like we do with children?
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Exactly what do you think "de facto innocent" means? A criminal trial is conducted by a trier of fact who determines whether the government could prove, beyond a reasonable doubt, that the defendant committed the charged crime. The trier of fact is the jury in a jury trial, and the judge in a bench (non-jury) trial -- their role is specifically to determine facts.
If your (unsupported) assertion is that half of convicts did not actually commit the crimes they are imprisoned for, given the fraction of convi
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If your (unsupported) assertion is that half of convicts did not actually commit the crimes they are imprisoned for, given the fraction of convictions obtained by plea rather than full trial, then an awful lot of them are guilty of perjury -- guilty pleas are sworn statements.
Suborning perjury is also a crime. So are you suggesting that basically all prosecutors should go to prison as well?
Blue? (Score:2)
"a blue Samsung cellphone"
Blue? Ah! I wondering about that.
Schwab pushes voice print a lot. (Score:2)
There is so much of easy publicly available audio for the billionaires. So it must be easy to construct a box that modifies the voice in real time. So many people post themselves in video in social media and youtube, all of them can be compromised.
Sent them a mail saying I don't believe in voice print, never turn on voice print. But they keep pitching for voice print.
new meaning (Score:2)
Gives new meaning to the term "cell phone."
Prison Cell Tower (Score:2)
I'm surprised the prison facilities doesn't have their own cell towers/stingray devices.
Faraday cage (Score:1)