Eight Indicted For $22m Identity Theft Scam Against At&t, T-mobile


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Eight Indicted For $22M Identity Theft Scam Against AT&T, T-Mobile

Defendants allegedly hijacked customers' identities to steal millions of dollars in wireless gear

Aug 20, 2009 | 05:08 PM

By Tim Wilson

DarkReading

Eight defendants were arraigned in a Brooklyn court yesterday for allegedly using the stolen identities of AT&T, T-Mobile, and Asurion customers to steal some $22 million worth of wireless equipment and services.

An indictment was unsealed in Brooklyn federal court yesterday morning charging Courtney Beckford, Gabe Beizem, Rawl Davis, Lennox Lambert, Marsha Montayne, Saul Serrano, Ron Shealey, and Rohan Stewart, with conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud. Beizem, Montayne, and Stewart were also charged with wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.

According to the indictment, between February 2005 and July 2009, Beizem -- an owner of Got Wireless (aka USA Wireless), a former authorized AT&T and T-Mobile dealer that operated in Brooklyn -- obtained dealer access codes for AT&T's and T-Mobile's online customer databases. Stewart, the owner of KP Wireless -- an authorized T-Mobile wireless device dealer operating in West Palm Beach, Florida -- also obtained dealer access codes for T-Mobile's customer database.

Using these access codes, Beizem, Stewart, and Montayne, and others, allegedly obtained existing customer information from the customer databases, including customers' names, addresses, and personal identifying information, the indictment says. Montayne, and others, then fraudulently assumed the identities of existing customers and obtained new wireless devices without payment and without the customers' permission.

In some cases, the indictment says, the defendants called AT&T and T-Mobile, adding new lines of service to existing customers' accounts, and requesting new wireless devices to support the new lines. In other cases, they allegedly called AT&T and T-Mobile, falsely claiming that a wireless device belonging to an existing customer was damaged or defective and requesting replacements. In still other cases, the defendants allegedly called AT&T and Asurion, falsely claiming that existing customers' wireless devices were lost or stolen and requested new wireless devices under AT&T's insurance program with Asurion.

full details at darkreading - http://www.darkreading.com/database_securi...Section=Privacy

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