RALEIGH – Robert J. Higdon, Jr., United States Attorney for
the Eastern District of North Carolina, announces the arrest after a federal
grand jury sitting in Raleigh previously returned an indictment charging FURMAN
ALEXANDER FORD, 49, of Raleigh with eleven counts each of Mail Fraud and Wire
Fraud.
Between August 2014 and December 2014, FORD allegedly
committed Mail Fraud and Wire Fraud based on the defendant’s scheme to submit
fraudulent withdrawal letters on behalf of an elderly victim to New York Life
Insurance (NYL) for payments totaling $246,000.
FORD worked as a financial advisor for NYL.
In 2009, the victim inherited real property valued at $1.3 million
from a relative in Durham, NC. After the
estate was settled, FORD assisted the victim in setting-up a charitable trust
with NYL using the inheritance proceeds.
He worked as an insurance and financial agent at NYL from 2012 to 2015,
and met the victim through a mutual friend.
The charitable trust agreement provided an annuity payment in the amount
of $6,000 per month to victim during her lifetime. As part of FORD’s responsibility as a
financial agent, he drafted and submitted authorized letters of withdrawal from
the victim’s trust account to pay certain expenses. Under NYL customer service guidelines, the
financial agent is required to have the client sign the letter with “wet ink”
before submitting to NYL via the mail.
The funds would then be electronically wired to the recipient as
directed by the client with their full knowledge and consent.
During the course of this investigation, agents identified
eleven separate fraudulent letters of withdraw drafted by FORD and submitted to
NYL headquarters in NY on behalf of his client.
The letters were all mailed by FORD via UPS from his office in
Raleigh. The funds requested ranged from
$5,000 to $45,000 and totaled $246,000.
The proceeds were then electronically wired into the victim’s personal
checking account in clear violation of NYL policy. Agents believe the defendant “cut and paste”
the victim’s signature from a legitimate letter before making a copy and
sending it to NYL on some of the fraudulent letters and on the remaining
letters, her signature had been forged.
The forged signatures appear to be signed by the same person, presumably
FORD.
If convicted on all of the charges, FORD would face a
maximum penalty of 20 years imprisonment, a $250,000 fine, and a term of
supervised release of not more than 3 years, and restitution.
The charges and allegations contained in the Indictment are
merely accusations. The defendant is
presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty in a court of law.
Investigation of this case was conducted by the U.S. Postal
Inspection Service and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. Assistant United States Attorney Ethan Ontjes
is prosecuting the case for the government.
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