Jackson, Miss. – Sharday Monique Thomas, 32, of Hammond,
Louisiana, was sentenced today by Chief U.S. District Judge Daniel P. Jordan,
III to serve 41 months in federal prison for a wire fraud scheme in which she
sought to fraudulently obtain money by faking her own kidnapping, announced
U.S. Attorney Mike Hurst and FBI Special Agent in Charge Christopher Freeze.
Her prison sentence will be followed by three years of supervised release.
On November 27, 2018, FBI special agents in Jackson,
Mississippi, were contacted by FBI special agents in Monroe, Louisiana,
regarding allegations that an individual by the name of Sharday Thomas had been
kidnapped and would be killed if a ransom was not delivered to a location in
Jackson, Mississippi. The purported kidnapper had contacted a former employer
of Thomas by way of text messages from Thomas’s cell phone. The text messages
stated that Thomas was being held against her will and instructed the former
employer to bring $4,500.00 cash to an address in Jackson or she would be
killed. The text messages included specific threats such as, "No cops or
she die," "I'm tired of waiting my trigger finger is itching,"
"Now or I'll blow her head off," and "I want my money now or she
dies," among others. The former employer, who was being assisted by the
Louisiana State Police, requested proof of life and spoke to Thomas on two
instances. Thomas told him that she would be killed if the ransom money was not
delivered as instructed.
With the assistance of the FBI office in New Orleans, FBI
special agents in Jackson were able to determine that Thomas was actually at an
address near the location in Jackson where the money was to be delivered. The
agents located Thomas and quickly determined that she had not actually been
kidnapped. Thomas was found in possession of the cell phone from which the
phone calls and texts had been sent. After being advised of her rights, Thomas
confessed to staging the kidnapping on her own and to sending text messages and
phone calls in order to fraudulently obtain money from her former employer.
Thomas consented to the search of her phone's contents on the scene, and agents
observed the text message chain used to stage her kidnapping.
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and the Louisiana State Police, and the case was prosecuted by
Assistant United States Attorney Dave Fulcher.
No comments:
Post a Comment