Living
a Lie
When Florida Highway Patrol Trooper
Richard Blanco—a member of the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) in
Jacksonville—interviewed an individual suspected of driver’s license fraud in
2011, he wasn’t initially sure if the man was the victim or the perpetrator of
identity theft.
That’s because the man—now imprisoned
and officially known as John Doe—had a stack of government-issued
identification acquired during the 22 years he had been using a living victim’s
identity. That included a passport, driver’s license, birth certificate, Social
Security card, and identification allowing him unescorted access to a port and
military installation.
“He was extremely convincing that he was
the victim,” said Blanco, a veteran trooper with more than 30 years on the
force. “When you have 20 forms of identification and it’s in your possession,”
Blanco explained, “it’s hard to not believe you are the person you say you
are.”
But John Doe was indeed an imposter, and
while he was living under another man’s name, the real victim was living a
nightmare. It all started in 1989 when the victim’s car was broken into and his
wallet was stolen. His identity had been compromised.
John Doe began using the victim’s name,
even when he went to prison for aggravated battery. As a result, Blanco said,
“if you run John Doe’s fingerprints, even today, they will come back with the
victim’s name.”
When the victim, a Miami resident, applied
to become a corrections officer, he had to explain why his records showed a
felony conviction. He urged officials to compare his fingerprints to those of
John Doe’s. When the victim applied for a passport, he was denied because the
passport office claimed he already had one—the one that John Doe had applied
for and received.
When Blanco was able to talk with the
real victim, he heard two decades worth of frustration. The victim had filed a
police report years before, but John Doe had never been caught or stopped.
Blanco remembers the victim telling him, “This guy has been living my identity.
He’s gotten my license suspended and he’s had kids in my name.”
When Blanco realized that he was dealing
with a massive and long-running case of identity fraud, John Doe was arrested.
The JTTF opened an investigation, and John Doe was eventually indicted
federally on numerous counts of aggravated identity theft and fraud.
JTTF investigators had to rule out any
threat to national security, because John Doe had access to the Mayport Naval
Station as well as JaxPort, the Jacksonville Port Authority. Although he was
just working at those locations, Special Agent Paxton Stelly, who supervises
Jacksonville’s JTTF, pointed out that John Doe had passed the background checks
required to gain access there. “He appears to have manipulated the system with
ease,” Stelly said.
Last month a jury convicted John Doe—who
continues to insist he is the real victim in the case—and sentenced him to 10
years in prison. Despite DNA testing and a thorough investigation, his real
identity remains a mystery.
“It will continue to be a mystery unless
he makes an admission to us,” Blanco said, adding, “I don’t know what he’s
going to do when he gets out of prison, because the man doesn’t have an
identity.”
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