FORT LAUDERDALE - Elvin I. Lewis, Jr., of Hollywood,
Florida, was convicted today of conspiracy to commit money laundering and money
laundering charges, following a five-day jury trial. The charges stemmed from his decision to
launder more than $3 million dollars in fraud proceeds from business email
compromise (“BEC”) cyber scams, announced U.S. Attorney Ariana Fajardo Orshan
for the Southern District of Florida, Special Agent in Charge Brian Swain of
the U.S. Secret Service (USSS) Miami Field Office, and Special Agent in Charge
George L. Piro of the FBI’s Miami Field Office.
According to evidence at trial, from approximately November
2017 through August 2018, in Broward County, Florida, and elsewhere, Lewis
knowingly and willfully agreed to participate in, and did participate in, a
conspiracy to commit money laundering, in violation of Title 18, United States
Code, Section 1956(h) (Case No. 19cr60034).
The purpose of the scheme was for Lewis and his co-conspirators to
unlawfully enrich themselves, to hide illegal proceeds, and to further wire
fraud schemes by, among other things, withdrawing, depositing, and transferring
fraudulently obtained funds between banks, and individuals. As trial testimony established, Lewis also
recruited others into the money laundering network, including a co-conspirator
based in Detroit, whom he originally solicited on Craigslist.
Lewis’s co-conspirators – believed to be located abroad –
contacted businesses (the “business victims”) located throughout the United
States, using email, social media, and other Internet-based methods of
communication, and falsely and fraudulently posed as vendors seeking payment
for services rendered, in order to facilitate the BEC scams. The co-conspirators, posing as vendors, used
spoofed emails and email account takeover techniques to send emails falsely and
fraudulently directing the business victims to make payments to various bank
accounts, through wire transfers, in purported satisfaction of invoices due to
the actual vendors.
Lewis’s role in the laundering conspiracy was to wire fraud
proceeds from the BEC scams into other corporate accounts under his and his
co-conspirators’ control, in return for a five to ten percent cut of the
funds. In particular, as trial evidence
established, Lewis created more than eight accounts at different banks for his
purported real estate investment business, “A NuFinancial Consortium LLC.” Through these accounts, Lewis laundered more
than $3 million in BEC proceeds in less than a year, approximately $2.3 million
of which was laundered in less than two weeks.
Lewis variously converted the funds to cashier’s checks and cash, and
wired money between accounts.
The business victims of the cyber scams included: a major
Canadian city; a trucking company in Tennessee; a power company in Ohio; an
axle company in Indiana and Detroit; an importing business in Chicago; and
others.
In total, Lewis made more than $160,000 in cash during the
course of the fraud and money laundering schemes. He used the funds to acquire a Porsche, which
law enforcement seized as part of this criminal case.
Lewis is scheduled to be sentenced on Jan. 10, 2020 at 3:30
p.m. before U.S. District Judge Roy K. Altman.
He faces a statutory maximum sentence of twenty years in prison as to
each of the eleven counts of conviction.
He also faces up to three years of supervised release, restitution and
monetary penalties.
U.S. Attorney Fajardo Orshan commended the investigatory
efforts of the USSS and FBI in this matter.
She also thanked IRS-CI’s Orlando Field Office for the trial assistance
provided by a money laundering expert.
This case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Lisa H. Miller
and Michele S. Vigilance. The asset
forfeiture component of the case is being handled by Assistant U.S. Attorneys
Alison W. Lehr and Daren Grove.
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