GA Man Sentenced For Using RI Homeless People To Cash Fake Checks
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Cranston RI
16 June, 2022
1:01 PM
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PROVIDENCE, RI — A Georgia man was sentenced in federal court for taking advantage of homeless people in Rhode Island by hiring them to participate in a fake check-cashing scheme. Jalen Ronald Stanford, 28, of Riverdale, Georgia, was sentenced Tuesday to two years in federal prison after pleading guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud last March. Stanford ran the scheme with Cortavious Benford, 28, of Atlanta, Austin Weaver, 26, of Decatur, and Michael Williams, 27, of East Point. All four men have pleaded guilty. According to the Department of Justice, the men ran the scheme from October 2018 to February 2021, recruiting homeless people in the Providence area to cash hundreds of thousands of dollars' worth of counterfeit business checks in Massachusetts, Rhode Island, Maine and Connecticut, in exchange for cash payments. Many of the people were arrested at banks while trying to cash the fake checks. Once the checks were cashed, the men would pay the homeless people between $100 and $200 each, prosecutors said. Williams and Benford were arrested on Feb. 5, 2021, after they recruited and drove a homeless person to a Providence bank. They threatened to injure him if he failed to provide them with all the check's proceeds, prosecutors said. Despite the threat, once inside the bank, the man pointed to Williams and Benford's vehicle in the parking lot. Providence police found the vehicle arrested Williams and Benford, and seized $12,000 in cash, prosecutors said. Police then got a search warrant and searched a Providence, seizing a computer, which had a program used to design and print checks, a printer, blank check stock and an envelope containing stolen checks and about $5,000 in cash. Several completed fraudulent checks were found on the computer, prosecutors said. Stanford was arrested on Feb. 25, 2021, and Weaver was arrested on March 3, 2021. According to prosecutors, the men cashed more than $677,000 worth of counterfeit checks throughout New England. Stanford was also ordered to pay restitution to financial institutions totaling $480,943.71.
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