Related Federal Cases
Immigration Scam Duo Gets 20-Year Sentence
Two Missouri men have pleaded guilty to their roles in a scheme to defraud consumers seeking immigration-related services. Thomas Joseph Strawbridge, 49, and Thomas Barret Laurence, 30, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit mail fraud and wire fraud in connection with Immigration Forms and Publications (IFP), a Sedalia, Mo., company that sold immigration forms available at no charge from the government.
According to court documents, IFP sales representatives fraudulently told consumers that the company was affiliated with the government and that fees paid to IFP covered government processing charges. Strawbridge and Laurence each face up to 20 years in prison, three years’ supervised release and a fine of up to $250,000.
“Over a year ago, the Department of Justice announced its commitment to combatting immigration services scams, which often prey upon individuals who are in this country legally and trying to abide by the rules,” said Acting Associate Attorney General Tony West. “Today’s guilty pleas represent an important step in our continued fight to protect vulnerable individuals against fraud.”
“Those who seek to defraud immigrants should heed the message of this case: you cannot take advantage of someone’s unfamiliarity with the immigration process, engage in fraud, and expect to get away with it,” said Stuart Delery, Acting Assistant Attorney General of the Justice Department’s Civil Division.
The scheme, which operated in 2009 and 2010, involved selling immigration forms that anyone can obtain for free from the government. Consumers were told that IFP employed paralegals who would help customers correctly fill out immigration forms, that IFP handled excess call volume for U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS), that fees paid to IFP included government processing fees, and that forms purchased through IFP would be processed more quickly than if consumers dealt directly with USCIS.
“This company preyed on legal immigrants who were doing their best to follow the law,” said David M. Ketchmark, Acting U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Missouri. “These defendants operated a busy call center where so-called agents lied to hundreds of customers about the firm’s affiliation with the government. Their victims paid more than $400,000 in total to purchase government forms that anyone can obtain for free.”
Elizabeth Lindsey Meredith, 24, was also charged in the scheme. The cases are being prosecuted by Alan Phelps and Adrienne Fowler, Trial Attorneys for the Civil Division’s Consumer Protection Branch, and Tony Gonzales, Assistant U.S. States Attorney for the Western District of Missouri. They were investigated by the FBI, the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the Missouri Secretary of State Corporate Division, the Missouri Secretary of State Securities Division and the Missouri Attorney General’s Office.
Key Facts
- State: Missouri
- Category: White Collar Crime
- Source: DOJ Press Release ↗
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