AMCostaRica©

AMCostaRica©

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Three
individuals were sentenced to prison
for their roles in an $11 million
telemarketing scheme that defrauded
primarily elderly victims in the
United States from call centers in
Costa Rica / A.M. Costa Rica wire
services photo.
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-Published:
Monday, January 27, 2020-
Two U.S. Citizen
and a Canadian jailed in Costa Rican
frauds
By the A.M. Costa Rica wire services
Three individuals were sentenced to prison
for their roles in an $11 million
telemarketing scheme that defrauded
primarily elderly victims in the United
States from call centers in Costa Rica.
U.S. District Judge Max O. Cogburn Jr. of
the Western District of North Carolina
gave these sentences Friday, according to
the U.S. Department of Justice:
- 7 years and five months to a man
surnamed Dodt, 76, originally of
Cleveland, Ohio.
- 9 years and five months to a man
surnamed Sniffen, 58, originally of
Peekskill, New York.
- 6 years to a man surnamed Saxon, 50,
originally of Ontario, Canada.
Cogburn also ordered restitution in the
amount of $7 million for Dodt, $11.2
million for Sniffen and $2.6 million for
Saxon to be paid jointly and severally
with their co-conspirators.
The Justice Department gave this
background:
Following a five-day trial in May 2019,
Dodt was found guilty of one count of
conspiracy to commit wire fraud and mail
fraud, two counts of mail fraud, eight
counts of wire fraud, one count of
conspiracy to commit international money
laundering and 10 counts of international
money laundering.
In April 2019, Sniffen pleaded guilty to
all allegations in the 31-count indictment
charging conspiracy to commit mail and
wire fraud, substantive counts of mail
fraud and wire fraud, international money
laundering and conspiracy to commit
international money laundering.
In May 2019, Saxon pleaded guilty pursuant
to a plea agreement to one count of
conspiracy to commit mail and wire fraud,
one count of mail fraud and one count of
conspiracy to commit international money
laundering.
According to the evidence presented at
both Dodt’s trial and the sentencing
hearings and the factual bases in support
of Sniffen’s and Saxon’s guilty pleas,
Dodt, Sniffen and Saxon conspired together
to commit the fraud and worked in a call
center in Costa Rica.
While falsely posing as federal judges,
representatives of the District of
Columbia Department of Consumer and
Regulatory Affairs and other federal
agencies, including the U.S. Federal Trade
Commission, they contacted victims in the
United States, primarily senior citizens,
to tell them that that they had supposedly
won a substantial “sweepstakes” prize.
After convincing victims that they stood
to receive a significant financial reward,
the members of the conspiracy told victims
that they needed to make a series of
up-front cash payments before collecting,
purportedly for items like insurance fees,
taxes and import fees.
The co-conspirators used a variety of
means to conceal their identity, such as
voice over internet protocol services
provided by Dodt that made it appear as if
they were calling from Washington, D.C.,
and other places in the United States.
At sentencing, it was determined that
Dodt, Sniffen, Saxon and their
co-conspirators collectively stole more
than $11 million in total from victims.
This case was investigated by the U.S.
Postal Inspection Service, IRS-CI and the
FBI with assistance from the Federal Trade
Commission and U.S. Immigration and
Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security
Investigations.
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Have you heard on wire fraud victims in
your community? We would like to know your
thoughts on this story. Send your
comments to news@amcostarica.com
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