Florida Man Sentenced to Prison After Traveling to Edwardsville to Cash Counterfeit Checks Using Stolen Identities

Florida Man Sentenced to Prison After Traveling to Edwardsville to Cash Counterfeit Checks Using Stolen Identities

The following press release was published by the U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys on May 7, 2021. It is reproduced in full below.

BENTON, Ill. - Elvin Lugo-Cales, 47, of Orlando, Florida, was sentenced today to 51 months in

federal prison and 3 years of court supervision after his release. In January, Lugo-Cales pled

guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud, use of a false passport, and aggravated identity theft.

On March 2, 2020, Lugo-Cales and his co-defendant, Johnny Collado, flew from New York to St. Louis

for the sole purpose of defrauding banks using stolen identities. They were paid members of a

criminal organization based in New York. Collado was the driver and coordinated the scheme through

text messages with a co-conspirator in New York. Lugo-Cales was known in the scheme as a “soldier"

- a person willing to travel to a new city, walk into banks, and conduct fraudulent transactions

face- to-face with bank tellers using fake IDs and counterfeit checks.

On March 5, 2020, Collado drove Lugo-Cales in a rental car to a US Bank location in Edwardsville,

Illinois. Lugo-Cales went inside the bank while Collado waited in the car. Lugo-Cales walked up to

a bank teller and presented a counterfeit check in the amount of $3,650.00 made payable to an

identity theft victim from Colorado. The check had a forged endorsement and the victim’s social

security number written on the back. Lugo-Cales also presented a false U.S. passport card bearing

Lugo-Cales’ photograph and the name of the victim. He then asked the bank teller to cash the check.

The bank teller recalled an internal e-mail she had received warning branches about a man traveling

around the St. Louis area attempting to cash counterfeit checks. Seeing that Lugo-Cales

fit the description of the suspect, she notified her bank manager and stalled the transaction

while the bank manager called the police.

Lugo-Cales grew nervous and demanded the bank teller return his check and passport card. When the

teller refused, he left the bank and drove away with Collado, leaving behind the counterfeit check

and passport card with his picture on it. The two men were pulled over and arrested nearby.

Lugo-Cales had over $1,500 cash in his pocket at the time of his arrest. Collado had numerous items

concealed near his crotch, including over $25,000 in cash, multiple counterfeit IDs, counterfeit

credit cards, and 19 blank counterfeit checks.

During the sentencing hearing, United States District Judge Staci M. Yandle remarked that identity

theft is a “very serious offense" that “destroys people’s lives.

Source: U.S. Department of Justice, Office of the United States Attorneys

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