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Feds Bust Alleged Scammers Who Preyed On Elderly With Lottery Scams In Florida

Federal Crime
Federal Crime

BY: STAFF REPORT | BocaNewsNow.com

BOCA RATON, FL (BocaNewsNow.com) (Copyright © 2024 MetroDesk Media, LLC) — If you received a call from someone claiming you won a lottery, then asking for money as a way to collect your winnings, the Department of Justice says it may have just busted the scammers. The DOJ issued this advisory to BocaNewsNow.com:

Monique C. Clarke, aka Monique Clark-Mootoo, aka Rebecca White, and aka Mark Hilton, 28, a Jamaican national, and Jon-Michael Hudson, 33, a resident of Jamaica, were charged in federal court by indictment with conspiracy to commit money laundering. Allegedly, the criminal enterprise targeted a total of 51 elderly victims throughout the United States and incurred in a total loss of more than $6.6 million dollars.

According to the allegations in the indictment, court documents, and statements made during court hearings, from October 2020 through January 2021, Clarke and Hudson were allegedly engaged in laundering proceeds from a criminal enterprise that targeted elderly victims throughout the United States. As alleged in a court document, members of the criminal enterprise engaged in a lottery scam.

The co-conspirators made telephone calls to elderly victims and told them that they had won a lottery contest prize of millions of dollars. The victims were told that to collect the prize, they must pay fees for shipping, taxes, insurance, and customs processing, among other things. The co-conspirators then asked the victims to send the funds (generally, via personal checks and cashier’s checks) to third-party individuals, commonly known as money mules, who are known for receiving and moving money that is fraudulently acquired from victims. Then, these individuals allegedly deposited the checks into their bank accounts, withdrew the cash and sent it to Clarke and other co-conspirators via a courier service.

A court document further alleges that Clarke received over $500,000 of $1,653,473 from the proceeds of five victims’ losses. Clarke and Hudson allegedly deposited a portion of the fraudulently obtained proceeds into Clarke’s bank accounts. Later, Clarke allegedly wired transferred $150,000 to a car dealer’s bank account in Jamaica for the purchase of a 2020 AMG GT 63 S Coupe Mercedes Benz.

On Feb. 14, Clarke and Hudson made their initial appearances in federal court. On Feb. 20, Hudson had his detention hearing. Clarke’s detention hearing was continued to Feb. 23. If convicted, Clarke and Hudson each face up to 20 years in federal prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines along with other mitigating, aggravating, and statutory factors.