A Miami Gardens, Florida, resident was sentenced to 48
months in prison in connection with a sophisticated global cell phone fraud
scheme that involved compromising cellphone customers’ accounts and “cloning”
their phones to make fraudulent international calls.
Assistant Attorney General Leslie R. Caldwell of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Wifredo A. Ferrer of the Southern
District of Florida and Special Agent in Charge George L. Piro of the FBI’s
Miami Field Office made the announcement.
Edwin Fana, 37, was sentenced yesterday by U.S. District
Judge Daniel T.K. Hurley of the Southern District of Florida. He pleaded guilty on Aug. 29 to one count of
conspiracy to commit wire fraud, access device fraud, the use, production or possession
of modified telecommunications instruments and the use or possession of
hardware or software configured to obtain telecommunications services; one
count of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. Fana received a reduced prison sentence due
to his cooperation in the government’s investigation.
According to the plea agreement, Fana and his
co-conspirators participated in a scheme to steal access to and fraudulently
open new cellphone accounts using the personal information of individuals
around the United States. Fana admitted
that the conspirators then trafficked in the cellphone customers’
telecommunication identifying information, using that data as well as other
software and hardware to reprogram cellphones that they controlled to transmit
thousands of international calls to Cuba, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic and
other countries with high calling rates.
The calls were billed to the victims’ compromised accounts, he admitted.
In addition, Fana admitted that his role in the scheme
included operating a “call site” in his residence in Miami Gardens. He
would receive telecommunication identifying information associated with
victims’ accounts from his co-conspirators and use that data to re-program
cellphones that he controlled. Fana’s
co-conspirators would then transmit international calls over the internet to
Fana’s residence, where he would route them through the re-programmed
cellphones. In October 2012, the FBI
executed a search warrant on Fana’s residence and discovered approximately 88
cellphones connected to networking equipment and actively routing calls.
Law enforcement seized nearly 11,000 telecommunications
identifying numbers from Fana and he admitted that the scheme caused at least
$1 million in losses.
Fana is the first defendant to be sentenced in the
case. Jose Santana and Farintong
Calderon have also pleaded guilty in connection with the scheme; Santana is
scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 4, 2017, and Calderon is scheduled to be
sentenced on Feb. 21, 2017.
The FBI investigated the case, dubbed Operation Toll Free,
which is part of the FBI’s ongoing effort to combat large-scale
telecommunications fraud. Senior Counsel
Matthew A. Lamberti of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual
Property Section and Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared M. Strauss of the Southern
District of Florida are prosecuting the case.
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