US Fed chief victim of fraud ring
Federal Reserve Board chairman Ben Bernanke was one of hundreds of victims of an identity fraud ring that stole over $2.1 million from individuals and financial institutions, according to Newsweek magazine.
The magazine, citing court documents, said the central bank chief became entangled in the scam after a thief stole his wife���s purse in August of last year and began cashing checks on the family���s bank account.
The purse-snatcher was working for a crime ring that federal agents and police in several US states had been investigating for months, Newsweek said, adding that Bernanke���s wife, Anna, was not specifically targeted.
It said the theft of the Bernanke checkbook became part of a wide-ranging identity-theft investigation by the US Secret Service and US Postal Inspection Service which had been previously underway.
Newsweek said the probe culminated in a series of arrests, criminal complaints, and indictments brought by federal prosecutors in Virginia. One of the group���s ringleaders, Clyde Austin Gray, known as ���Big Head,��� pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud last month.
Gray employed an army of pickpockets, mail thieves, and office workers to swipe checks, credit cards, military IDs, and other personal records, it said. Bernanke said ���identity theft is a serious crime that affects millions of Americans each year.
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