A former West Palm Beach, Florida resident who was
extradited to the United States from the Dominican Republic was sentenced to 65
months in prison today for multiple criminal charges 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.
U.S. Attorney Ariana Fajardo Orshan of the Southern District
of Florida, Assistant Attorney General Brian A. Benczkowski of the Justice
Department’s Criminal Division, and
Special Agent in Charge George L. Piro of the FBI’s Miami Field Office made the
announcement.
Braulio De
la Cruz Vasquez, 54, pleaded guilty earlier 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. De la Cruz also pleaded guilty to one count
of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft. He was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Beth
Bloom of the Southern District of Florida.
According
to the plea agreement, De le Cruz and his co-conspirators participated in a
scheme to steal access to existing cell phone accounts, and fraudulently open
new cellphone accounts, using the personal information of individuals around
the United States.
De la Cruz
admitted that his role in the scheme included operating a “call site” from his
residence in West Palm Beach. He
admitted that he would receive telecommunication identifying information
associated with customers’ accounts from his co-conspirators and use that data,
as well as other software and hardware, to reprogram cellphones that he
controlled. According to the plea
agreement, De la Cruz’s co-conspirators would then transmit thousands of international
calls over the internet to De la Cruz’s residence, where he would route them
through the re-programmed cellphones to Cuba, Jamaica, the Dominican Republic
and other countries with high calling rates.
The calls were billed to the customers’ compromised accounts.
In addition, De la Cruz admitted that from March 2011
through April 2013, co‑conspirators sent him more than 700 emails containing
approximately 2,158 telecommunications identifying numbers associated with
cellphone account holders around the United States. He also admitted that, as part of the
conspiracy, he received tens of thousands of dollars from at least one Voice
over Internet Protocol (VoIP) company for fraudulently routing international
calls through his call center.
De la Cruz is a citizen of the Dominican Republic. He was arrested in the Dominican Republic at
the request of the United States and then, in August 2018, extradited to Miami,
where he is currently in custody.
De la Cruz is the fifth defendant to be sentenced in the
case. Previously, defendants Edwin Fana,
Farintong Calderon, Jose Santana, and Ramon Batista pleaded guilty to similar
charges and have already been sentenced to prison terms ranging from 36 months
to 75 months.
The FBI investigated the case, dubbed Operation Toll Free,
which is part of the FBI’s ongoing effort to combat large-scale
telecommunications fraud. The Criminal
Division’s Office of International Affairs handled the extradition in this
matter. Assistant U.S. Attorney Jared M.
Strauss of the Southern District of Florida and Senior Counsel Matthew A.
Lamberti of the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property
Section are prosecuting the case.
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