MINNEAPOLIS—Today in federal court, a
39-year-old St. Paul man pleaded guilty to filing a false insurance claim for
$250,000. On August 6, 2012, Jason William Sheedy was charged via an
information with one count of wire fraud in connection to this incident. He
entered his plea today before United States District Court Judge Susan Richard
Nelson.
In his plea agreement, Sheedy admitted
that between September 2007 and December 2011, he devised a scheme to obtain
money from the AXA Art Insurance Corporation (“AXA”) through fraud. AXA is an
insurance company that insures artwork and items of historical value. In
September of 2007, Sheedy insured several items, including artwork, with the
company. Then, on September 27, 2007, he filed an insurance claim for $274,905,
reporting that some of the insured pieces, including several works of art, had
been stolen from a moving van. On January 28, 2008, pursuant to that claim, AXA
mailed Sheedy a check for $254,832. Even so, on May 24, 2011, Sheedy listed six
of the reportedly stolen paintings on Artbrokerage.com, an Internet website for
a Nevada auction house. A December 2011 search of Sheedy’s residence yielded
all but one of the art pieces reported stolen.
Sheedy also admitted filing a false
claim with the Farmer’s Insurance Company in September 2007. That claim,
purportedly for stolen household items valued at $93,302, was paid on February
12, 2008.
This case is the result of an
investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. It is being prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorneys Lola Velazquez-Aguilu and Benjamin F.
Langner.
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