New York

Jamaican man charged with swindling the elderly out of $5 million in sweepstakes scam

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A Jamaican citizen is facing justice in America for allegedly cheating elderly people out of more than $5 million with a scam that charged them a fee to cash in on phony sweepstakes prizes, authorities said.

Federal prosecutors charged Adrian Lawrence in a six-count indictment that accuses him of mail fraud and wire fraud in connection with a scheme to defraud elderly U.S. citizens.

Lawrence and his accomplices cheated at least 50 people out of more than $5 million over the last 10 years, federal prosecutors said.

Adrian Lawrence and his team allegedly called or emailed elderly victims and falsely tell them they had won sweepstakes contests.

“Lawrence and his co-conspirators preyed on dozens of elderly persons, contacting the victims by phone and email, spinning the lie that they had won a sweepstakes prize, then having gained their trust, betrayed them by extracting a purported fee to collect the non-existent winnings,” said U.S. Attorney Breon Peace.

Lawrence and his team would call or email elderly victims and falsely tell them they had won certain sweepstakes contests that were sponsored by Publishers Clearing House, prosecutors said.

They also told the victims that in order to cash in, they needed to wire or transfer money to various bank accounts and to mail checks and cash to Lawrence’s co-conspirators throughout the U.S. to pay for “fees.”

Adrian Lawrence and his cohorts allegedly swindled more than $5.6 million out of at least 50 elderly victims.

Officials said Lawrence used a variety of aliases, email addresses and phone numbers to pull off the scam. At least 50 victims, whose average age was 81 years old, sent more than $5.6 million to Lawrence and his accomplices, according to the indictment.

In 2018, one victim in Arizona transferred $30,000 to a bank on Long Island. Around the same time, a Florida victim gave up $40,000 to the scam. and sent his money to an account in Brooklyn, authorities said.

“Postal Inspectors remind everyone that you can’t win a lottery or sweepstakes that you didn’t enter.” said U.S. Postal Inspection Service Inspector-in-Charge Daniel Brubaker. “You never have to pay any amount to collect a legitimate prize.”

Lawrence was detained last month in Panama and extradited to the U.S. on Feb. 8.

If convicted, Lawrence faces up to 20 years in prison.

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