Manager of Missouri Scheme Faces
up to 20 Years in Prison
A Missouri woman pleaded guilty today
for her role in a scheme to defraud consumers seeking immigration-related
services, the Justice Department announced.
Elizabeth Lindsey Meredith, 24, pleaded guilty
to conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud, six counts of mail fraud and
seven counts of wire fraud in connection with Immigration Forms and
Publications (IFP), a Sedalia, Mo., company that sold immigration forms
generally available at no charge from the government. According to court documents, IFP sales
representatives fraudulently told consumers that the company was affiliated
with the government and that fees paid to IFP covered government processing
charges. Meredith faces up to 20 years’
in prison, three years of supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000.
“Over a year ago, the Department of
Justice announced its commitment to combatting immigration services scams,
which often prey upon individuals who are in this country legally and trying to
abide by the rules,” said Acting Associate Attorney General Tony West. “Today’s guilty pleas represent an important
step in our continued fight to protect vulnerable individuals against fraud.”
“Consumers trust that government
services are what they claim. We will
not tolerate those who exploit that trust,” said Stuart Delery, Acting
Assistant Attorney General of the Department of Justice’s Civil Division.
According to court documents, Meredith was a
manager of IFP, which operated in 2009 and 2010. In pleading guilty, Meredith admitted that
IFP representatives falsely told consumers that the company employed paralegals
who would help customers correctly fill out immigration forms, that IFP handled
excess call volume for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), that
fees paid to IFP included government processing fees, and that forms purchased
through IFP would be processed more quickly than if consumers dealt directly
with USCIS.
“Law-abiding immigrants sought help to
complete government forms, but instead this company cheated hundreds of victims
out of more than $400,000 and provided little or no help at all,” said David M.
Ketchmark, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri. “This
defendant managed the day-to-day operations of the Sedalia office; with her
guilty plea today, all of the conspirators now will be held accountable for
their fraud and deceit.”
U.S. Magistrate Judge Matt J. Whitworth
presided over the change of plea hearing.
Thomas Joseph Strawbridge, 49, and Thomas
Barret Laurence, 30, previously pleaded guilty for their conduct in the same
scheme.
These cases are being prosecuted by Alan
Phelps and Adrienne Fowler, Trial Attorneys for the Civil Division’s Consumer
Protection Branch, and Tony Gonzalez, Assistant U.S. Attorney for the Western
District of Missouri. The cases were investigated by the FBI, the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service, the Missouri Secretary of State Corporate Division, the
Missouri Secretary of State Securities Division and the Missouri Attorney
General’s Office. The Justice Department has also been working with the
Federal Trade Commission on immigration services fraud cases and thanks the FTC
for its assistance in this matter.
For information regarding immigration forms
and information concerning the immigration process, go to the U.S. Citizenship
and Immigration Services website: UScis.gov/avoidscams .
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