September
8 , 2005 --
Attorney General Alberto R. Gonzales travels to Mississippi
and Louisiana today with Vice President Dick Cheney to tour
areas devastated by Hurricane Katrina and outline priorities
for the newly established Hurricane Katrina Fraud Task Force,
designed to deter, investigate and prosecute disaster-related
federal crimes such as charity fraud and insurance fraud.
In
a planned visit to Gulfport, Miss., the Attorney General
will meet with Department of Justice personnel who are working
out of the Jackson office. In Louisiana, the Attorney General
plans to visit a law enforcement detention center in New
Orleans and meet with Justice Department staff, including
personnel from the U.S. Attorney's Office in the Eastern
District of Louisiana (New Orleans), who are presently working
out of offices in Baton Rouge.
Recent history, including Hurricane Ivan and the terrorist
attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, has shown that some criminals
seek to profit from disaster by means of fraud, and recent
reports indicate that fraudulent Internet sites designed
to lure those seeking to donate to Hurricane Katrina relief
efforts have already been posted.
The
Hurricane Katrina Fraud Task Force - chaired by Assistant
Attorney General Alice S. Fisher of the Criminal Division
- includes members from the FBI, the Federal Trade Commission,
the Postal Inspector's Office, and the Executive Office
of the United States Attorneys, among others. The Task Force
will be directed to track referrals of potential cases and
complaints, coordinate with law enforcement agencies to
initiate investigations, match referrals with the appropriate
U.S. Attorney's offices, and ensure timely and effective
prosecution of Katrina fraud cases. The Task Force will
be national in scope, working with state and local law enforcement
and state attorneys general to identify cases, and will
report back to the Attorney General on a periodic basis.
“We
cannot allow the kindness of Americans to be exploited in
this time of disaster and crisis,” said Attorney General
Gonzales. “This Task Force will help ensure that those offering
a helping hand do not themselves become the victims of fraud,
and that the money and support they so graciously and generously
offer goes to the intended recipients - the many victims
of Hurricane Katrina.”
The
Task Force will work aggressively with a focus on specific
areas of fraud, with the ability to alter its focus if necessary
to adapt to whatever fraudulent schemes are created by those
who are looking for illegal gain. Examples of those types
of fraud include:
Fraudulent
Charities: Cases in which individuals falsely hold themselves
out as agents of a legitimate charity, or create a “charity”
that is in fact a sham;
Identity
Theft: Cases in which the identities of innocent victims
are “stolen” and assumed by criminals who convert the assets
of, or otherwise defraud, the victims, and;
Insurance
Fraud: Cases in which false or inflated insurance claims
are filed;
Government
Benefit Fraud: Cases in which individuals file false applications
seeking benefits to which they are not entitled.
Several
existing government websites and resources are available
to obtain information about, and report instances of, Katrina-related
fraud. The FBI website, www.fbi.gov,
contains updated alerts about particular types of charity-related
frauds. Members of the public can also report instances
of fraud on the Website for the FBI's Internet Crime Complaint
Center, at www.ic3.gov
The
Fraud Section of the Criminal Division maintains additional
information about Internet-related scams at www.internetfraud.usdoj.gov
The
Federal Trade Commission provides additional information
at its website, www.ftc.gov
and a toll-free FTC hotline, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357,
TTY/TDD: 202-326-2502), also allows consumers to report
suspected fraud schemes, including Katrina-related fraud.