April 23, 2009

Tahir Ali Khan, Ring Leader of $24 Million Fraud Scheme Sentenced To 14 Years In Prison!

Mortgage Fraud News Blog
Ring Leader of $24 Million Fraud Scheme Sentenced
Rachel Dollar is an attorney and Certified Mortgage Banker
Tuesday Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Tahir Ali Khan, the leader of a ring that used fake identification documents to bilk over 50 financial institutions out of more than $24 million, has been sentenced by United States District Judge Loretta A. Preska to 14 years in prison. Khan was indicted, along with 14 other co-defendants, in a multi-count Indictment unsealed on August 15, 2007. Today's sentence follows Khan's guilty plea on November 25, 2008, to a four-count Superseding Information charging him with one count of conspiracy to commit credit card fraud, one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and bank fraud, and two counts of aggravated identity theft.

As set forth in the Government's sentencing submission and other public filings in this case, Khan headed a ring that produced false identification documents in fictitious names. The documents, purporting to have been issued by state and federal government authorities, included driver's licenses, resident alien cards, social security cards, and tax identification documents. In order to build financial credit for the fictitious identities, members of Khan's ring, among other things, fraudulently established bank accounts, credit card accounts, apartment leases, and telephone and utility accounts in the names of the fictitious identities. Participants in the ring also applied for and obtained lucrative bank loans, home mortgage loans, increased credit card limits, lines of credit, and other financial benefits in the names of the fictitious identities or in the names of sham businesses supposedly operated by those fictitious identities. The loans and credit card debt were then defaulted on, resulting in millions in losses to numerous financial institutions. Losses from the ring's fraudulent activities exceeded $24 million.

In sentencing Khan to 14 years in prison, Judge Preska stated that Khan had been involved in "a vast array of crimes, of frauds and thefts, extending well over a decade." Judge Preska further noted that Khan committed those crimes charged in the Superseding Information while a fugitive from justice. As set forth in the Government's sentencing submission, after federal authorities arrested Khan on August 15, 2007, they learned through a fingerprint match that Khan had been previously arrested federally in 1995, in California, under the name "Jonathan Branscum," but that Khan absconded in that case after being granted bail. Khan dropped the name "Jonathan Branscum," and moved to the New York area, using a different name.

Judge Preska further stated that Khan's "entry into the United States was itself the subject of identity theft." Count Three of the Superseding Information, to which Khan pleaded guilty, charged Khan with stealing the identity of a real person, "Waheed Khan," in order to obtain a permanent resident card and other immigration benefits.

In addition to the prison term, Judge Preska sentenced Khan to three years of supervised release, restitution in the amount of $24,649,890.32, and forfeiture of items seized in August 2007 from Khan's homes in Alabama and New York.

Acting United States Attorney Lev L. Dassin said this investigation is "a model of cooperation between federal, state and local prosecutors and investigative agencies."

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