May 8, 2009
FOUR SEATTLE AREA WOMEN PLEAD GUILTY TO BANK FRAUD SCHEME IN OPERATION
HONOR ROLE
Defendants Stole Identities to Apply for More than $2 Million in Student Loans
Four women, three from one family, pleaded guilty this week in connection with
a bank fraud scheme that abused student loan programs. Members of the theft ring
were arrested June 8, 2008, after being indicted for Bank Fraud and Aggravated
Identity Theft. The women used other peoples Social Security numbers and
identification information to apply for $2,234,000 in student loans. The banks
were defrauded of more than $722,000.
KATHERINE FAIR, 37, of Seattle pleaded guilty May 6, 2009, to bank fraud. KATHY
L. HARDY, 60, of Renton, Washington, and her two daughters, LESLIE Y. GORDON,
36, and THERESA R. HARDY, 21, both also of Renton, pleaded guilty on May 7, 2009,
to bank fraud. In their plea agreements, GORDON admits that she was the organizer
of the bank fraud scheme to use stolen identities to obtain student loan proceeds;
KATHY HARDY admitted she provided the stolen identities from the medical office
where she worked to facilitate the fraud; and THERESA HARDY admitted she allowed
her name and bank account to be used to negotiate
the checks issued by the banks. The scheme began in April 2005, and over the next
three years various members of the conspiracy allegedly submitted a dozen different
student loan applications using other peoples names, and/or Social Security
numbers as the borrower or the co-signer. The conspirators defaulted on the loans,
taking the cash but never making a payment.
The loans were taken out from private student loan companies, but were funded
by banks. For example, according to the indictment, on December 31, 2005, KATHY
HARDY and LESLIE GORDON submitted false student loan paperwork to Astrive Student
Loans. The $30,000 loan was funded by RBS Citizens N.A., a U.S. financial institution
as defined by law. Other loans were taken out through the course of the conspiracy
through Sallie Mae, and were funded by Sallie May Bank; through My Rich Uncle
Student Loans which were funded by Doral Bank FSB; and through Educated Borrow
which were funded by Richland State Bank.
Sentencing for all four defendants is scheduled for August 21, 2009, in front
of U.S. District Judge John C. Coughenour.
The case was investigated by Social Security Administration Office of Inspector
General (SSAOIG), the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Secret Service, the
United States Postal Inspection Service, the Seattle Police Department and the
King County Sheriffs Office. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United
States Attorneys Norman Barbosa and Aravind Swaminathan as part of the U.S. Attorneys
Office Working Group on Identity Theft.
For additional information please contact Emily Langlie, Public Affairs Officer
for the United States Attorneys Office, at (206) 553-4110.