Jamaican citizen charged in connection with the operation of a Jamaica-based fraudulent lottery scheme was sentenced to two years in prison by the federal court in Charlotte, North Carolina, the Department of Justice announced today.
Shashana Stacyann Smith, 34, was sentenced to serve 24
months in prison by U.S. District Court Judge Robert J. Conrad Jr. Smith was
also ordered to pay $167,532.95 in restitution.
Smith pleaded guilty on March 31, to one count of conspiracy
to commit mail and wire fraud in the Western District of North Carolina. As
part of her guilty plea, Smith acknowledged that from in or about early 2015
through at least in or about August 2016, she was a member of a lottery fraud
conspiracy that targeted victims in the United States.
“Today’s sentencing demonstrates the Justice Department’s
commitment to combatting foreign-based lottery fraud schemes targeting
individuals in the United States,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Chad
A. Readler of the Justice Department’s Civil Division. “Financial schemes
designed to defraud unsuspecting victims will be prosecuted to the fullest
extent of the law.”
Smith was arrested in Florida on Dec. 14, 2016 after being
indicted by a grand jury in Charlotte, North Carolina. As part of her guilty
plea, Smith acknowledged that victims of the scheme received a telephone call
stating that they had won money in a sweepstakes or lottery. Victims were
instructed to send money for fees or other expenses in order to release their
purported lottery winnings. The victims of the scheme sent hundreds of
thousands of dollars to Smith, who then sent, transported, or facilitated
payment of a portion of the money to Jamaica. Smith acknowledged there was no lottery,
that there were no winnings, and that she kept some the victims’ money for her
own benefit.
“Engaging in a fraud scheme targeting Americans carries
serious consequences, including time in prison,” said U.S. Attorney Jill
Westmoreland Rose of the Western District of North Carolina. “Particularly
insidious are those who target victims in the sanctity of their home and those
who unfortunately do not quite understand the consequences of providing
information to these fraudsters. We consider today's sentence a win for all
Americans who are weary of these phone call scammers.”
“The Postal Inspection Service is dedicated to investigating
and combating fraud on American citizens, many of whom are older,” said
Inspector in Charge Daniel Brubaker of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service’s
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Division. “Today’s sentencing demonstrates our
efforts to catch criminals who use the U.S. mail to commit their criminal
activity.”
This prosecution is part of the Department of Justice’s
effort to work with federal and local law enforcement to combat fraudulent
lottery schemes in Jamaica that prey on U.S. citizens.
Acting Assistant Attorney General Readler and U.S. Attorney
Rose commended the investigative efforts of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service
and the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation. The case was
prosecuted by Trial Attorney Raquel Toledo of the Civil Division’s Consumer
Protection Branch, with the assistance of Assistant U.S. Attorney Kelli H.
Ferry of the Western District of North Carolina.
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