St. Louis, MO – Anas Alshurafa, 50, of St. Louis County, pleaded
guilty to one count of mail fraud and three counts of wire fraud this morning
before Chief Judge Rodney Sippel in St. Louis.
Judge Sippel accepted Alshurafa’s plea and deferred sentencing until
October 4, 2019.
According to his plea agreement, in April 2017,
investigators received information that the operator of Autoway Car Sales, Anas
Alshurafa, and its owner, Wasim Charfa, were fraudulently obtaining motor
vehicle loans.
The investigation revealed that Alshurafa submitted
fraudulent loan applications with counterfeit supporting documents and stolen
identifying information to various credit issuers that operated in interstate
commerce. The documents were presented
to the credit issuers by mail and through interstate wires.
When an audit of the submitted documents revealed numerous
inconsistencies, Alshurafa falsely claimed that an employee presented the
documentation without his knowledge. To
bolster his story, Alshurafa emailed the credit issuer’s representative a
forged letter of admission from an individual who was not associated with his
business. He also sent the credit issuer
a counterfeit driver’s license bearing the identifying information of that
individual, but the photograph of another person.
Despite the execution of a search warrant by state and
federal investigators in May 2017, and the seizure of his vehicles by the City
of Pagedale, Missouri Police Department, Alshurafa electronically transmitted a
fraudulent loan application using the identifying information of a past customer
in order to secure funding from one of his credit issuers. On June 7, 2017, Alshurafa used the
identifying information and previously submitted loan verification
documentation of J.L.G. to obtain a loan for which Autoway Car Sales received a
commission of $6,878.83 for the loan financing they obtained.
A forensic examination of computers seized during the
execution of a search warrant on May 31, 2017 revealed templates of counterfeit
bank statements in electronic folders bearing defendant’s name.
The government estimated that the defendant’s scheme caused
losses to the victims of more than $250,000 between January 1, 2016 and
December 20, 2017.
Wire fraud and mail fraud carries a maximum penalty of 20
years imprisonment for each count and a fine of $250,000 or both. Restitution to the victims is also mandatory.
The case was investigated by the investigated by the
Missouri DOR – Compliance and Investigation Bureau, the United States Postal
Inspection Service, the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The agencies were assisted by the Pagedale
Police Department. Tracy Berry is
handling the case for the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
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