Crime & Safety
9 Stole ID's To Get NJ Licenses, Purchase Cars: Attorney General
The price of the vehicles amounted to $1.3 million, according to the office of the Attorney General.
NEW JERSEY - Nine individuals have been charged with conspiring to use stolen identities to obtain New Jersey digital driver’s licenses which they used to fraudulently purchase and finance motor vehicles and watercrafts worth more than $1.3 million at dealerships in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York, Connecticut, and Massachusetts, according to Attorney General Gurbir Grewal.
The defendants allegedly obtained New Jersey digital driver’s licenses from the Jersey City and North Bergen Motor Vehicle Agencies using the stolen identities of U.S. citizens in Puerto Rico and fake Puerto Rico driver’s licenses, along with other false documents, including Social Security cards, debit cards, and birth certificates. From February 2017 through December 2018, they allegedly fraudulently purchased, financed, titled and/or transferred 26 motor vehicles and three watercrafts with trailers – one boat and two jet skis – using the fraudulently obtained New Jersey driver’s licenses and the identities and credit of the victims in Puerto Rico.
Ten vehicles were recovered in the U.S., but it is believed the others were shipped overseas, including seven known to have been shipped to the Dominican Republic, officials said.
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“Within the span of two years, these defendants allegedly purchased over $1.3 million worth of vehicles and watercrafts using stolen identities and fraudulently obtained New Jersey digital driver’s licenses. They then shipped a number of the stolen vehicles overseas,” said Grewal. “This case highlights that fraud involving official documents frequently is tied to larger criminal conspiracies, including identity theft and financial fraud, among other illegal activities. That is why we will remain vigilant with our partners at the Motor Vehicle Commission, who alerted us to the document fraud underlying this interstate and international criminal scheme.”
Eight of the nine defendants listed allegedly personally obtained New Jersey driver’s licenses using stolen identities and made fraudulent purchases of vehicles and/or watercrafts in New Jersey or other states. The ninth, Reyfy Gonzalez, allegedly conspired with the others in the document fraud and was involved in receiving and transferring stolen vehicles and watercrafts, officials said. Six of the defendants are charged with theft by deception for allegedly personally making fraudulent purchases in New Jersey, officials said.
The defendants were charged in “Operation Export,” an investigation by the Division of Criminal Justice Specialized Crimes Bureau that began with a referral from the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission’s Security and Investigations Unit. The Motor Vehicle Commission (MVC) alerted the Attorney General’s Office after discovering that the Puerto Rico driver’s licenses used by the defendants to obtain New Jersey digital driver’s licenses were fraudulent.
The New Jersey MVC uses a two-pronged strategy to reduce the incidents of fraudulent documents being used to acquire New Jersey driver’s licenses:
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They conduct commission-wide training in advanced fraudulent document identification and assign a team of trained investigators to examine the authenticity of suspect documents.
When investigators detect an increase in the appearance of certain fraudulent documents, such as counterfeit Puerto Rico driver’s licenses, MVC field investigators give these documents greater scrutiny as they are presented in licensing centers.
“This is a reminder that a big part of our job at the New Jersey Motor Vehicle Commission is to prevent fraud, including identity theft,” said MVC Chief Administrator Sue Fulton. “I commend our Security and Investigations team for their diligence and skill in helping launch the investigation that ultimately put a stop to this.”
After buying a vehicle on credit, the defendants allegedly would “wash” the vehicle title by creating a fraudulent lien release or fraudulent title indicating there was no lien on the vehicle. The fake document was used to obtain a clean title in another state. That clean title was then used to transfer ownership to another individual, often within the conspiracy, allowing the vehicle to be shipped overseas.
The following nine defendants were charged as indicated by the New Jersey Division of Criminal Justice in Operation Export:
Taina G. Perez, 27, of Methuen, Mass.
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
- 2nd Degree Theft by Deception
Reyfy Gonzalez, 31, of Fort Lee
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Receiving Stolen Property
Jose M. Irizarry, 44, of New Haven, Conn.
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Theft by Deception
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another (Previously charged in Hudson County)
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records (Previously charged in Hudson County)
Ricardo Acevedo, 32, of Lawrence, Mass.
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
- 2nd Degree Theft by Deception
Andy A. Mazara, 27, of Lawrence, Mass.
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
- 2nd Degree Theft by Deception
Tirson Ruiz, 50, of Lawrence, Mass.
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
- 3rd Degree Theft by Deception
Alvaro J. Alvarez-Capio, 45, of Lowell, Mass.
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
- 3rd Degree Theft by Deception
Willie A. Samuel-Baldayaquez, 38, of Newark
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
Guillermo Alex Cruz-Guerrero, 42, of Ohio
- 2nd Degree Conspiracy
- 2nd Degree Use of Personal Identifying Information of Another
- 3rd Degree Tampering with Public Records
Irizarry and Gonzalez are in custody in New Jersey; Samuel-Baldayaquez is in custody in Connecticut; Cruz-Guerrero is in custody in Ohio; and Ruiz was previously deported. The remaining defendants are in custody in Massachusetts.
“Identity theft is an ever-present threat, and when criminals are able to convert stolen identities into powerful identification documents, such as driver’s licenses, the potential for fraud and harm to victims grows exponentially, as this case illustrates,” said Director Veronica Allende of the Division of Criminal Justice. “I commend the staff in our Specialized Crimes Bureau for skillfully and diligently following every lead, across state and even international borders, to uncover this far-reaching conspiracy. I also commend our partners at the MVC for triggering this investigation by discovering the initial document fraud.”
Second-degree crimes carry a sentence of five to 10 years in state prison and a fine of up to $150,000, while third-degree crimes carry a sentence of three to five years in prison and a fine of up to $15,000.
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