A Georgia man has been arrested on federal charges he carried out an e-mail spoofing scheme that cost a Kansas county $566,000.
U.S. Attorney Tom Beall said George S. James, 48, Brookhaven, Ga., is charged with one count of wire fraud. An FBI agent’s affidavit alleges that investigators followed an electronic trail that led them to James.
The criminal complaint alleges that on Sept 23, 2016, Sedgwick County received an e-mail purporting to be from the CEO of Cornejo & Sons, LLC, for work done on a road project, with a form attached requesting payments be made electronically to a new account at a Wells Fargo Bank in Georgia.
Payment was made on Oct. 7, 2016, after which time the county learned that Cornejo did not receive the payment and did not send the e-mail to the county. Prosecutors say James fraudulently received the payment through an account he held at a Georgia bank in the name of Rapid Repairs and Consultants.
The criminal complaint alleges the scheme involved providing false information over the Internet to the county’s Automated Clearing House. The fraudulent email caused the county to change the information it kept on file for the Cornejo company’s financial institution and bank account.
If convicted, James faces a penalty of up to 20 years in federal prison and a fine up to $250,000.