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McCaskill announces arrests in IRS impersonation scam

Claire McCaskill
After U.S. Senator Claire McCaskill called for increased law enforcement action to combat an emerging scam in which individuals impersonate IRS agents, five individuals have been arrested for perpetrating that scam.

The arrests came after a tip made to the Aging Committee’s fraud hotline. Sen. McCaskill is the ranking Democrat on the committee.

“These predators make people afraid to answer their own phones and prey on people’s sense of responsibility—they deserve to go to prison,” said McCaskill. “We need more aggressive action taken against scam artists like this, and I hope this is the start of many arrests for perpetuating this scam.”

According to the court documents, the suspects are responsible for nearly $2 million in schemes that defrauded more than 1,500 victims.

Thousands of Americans have been victims of a telephone scam in which criminals claim to be IRS officials and threaten victims with legal action or arrest unless immediate payment is made. The victims, many of whom are elderly Americans, have lost millions of dollars as a result of this scam.

According to government figures, at least 400,000 Americans have been targeted with this kind of scam, with several thousand having been defrauded out of a total of nearly $15 million dollars. This figure includes $112,000 that has been stolen from 36 Missouri victims. More than 10,000 attempted scam calls are being placed every week.

McCaskill, a longtime advocate for preventing IRS identity and other scams—last year led a hearing on preventing phone scams and the IRS impersonation scheme, which officials have called the “largest, most pervasive impersonation scam in the history of the IRS.” According to government figures, this scam, which has targeted hundreds of thousands of Americans, has cost victims of $23 million in less than two years.

At a recent hearing, McCaskill said, “If you get a call from the IRS out of the blue, don’t answer it—let it go to voicemail.” The IRS has developed that same consistent messaging, however, last winter Congress passed two measures that would upend that message by making it far more likely that consumers might confuse a real IRS call with that of a scammer. Those measures required the IRS to employ private debt collectors, and to allow those debt collectors to use robocalls for debt collection. McCaskill strongly opposed both measures.

McCaskill also backed bipartisan legislation that would repeal the legalizing of IRS robocalls by requiring callers to have the receiving party’s consent before making automated calls or texts for collecting debts owed or guaranteed by the federal government. The bill is supported by several prominent consumer groups, including the Consumer Federation of American and Consumers Union.

McCaskill recently requested from the IRS a plan on how the agency intends to crack down on identity theft scammers who are stealing consumers’ Identity Protection PINs in order to file fraudulent tax returns. These PINs were originally intended to deter fraudulent filing by thieves who may already possess an individual’s stolen personally identifying information.

Large tornado causes extensive damage, minor injuries

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The National Weather Service says a large tornado missed the town of Chapman west of Topeka, Kansas by about a mile. About 20 homes were damaged or destroyed and several people suffered minor injuries.

Meteorologist Chad Omitt says the tornado formed just after 7 p.m. near the Ottawa County community of Niles. He says it stayed on the ground continuously as it moved into Dickinson County.

Omitt says it looks like “the heart” of the tornado was just about a mile south of the town of Chapman at one point. He says estimates are that the twister was a quarter- to a half-mile wide at times.

Weather service crews were expected to survey the area Thursday.

(Staff and Wire Reports)

Bicycle Across Missouri offers a “Big BAM” celebration

Big Bam logoHundreds of cyclists converge on St Joe next month for the first leg of the Bicycle Across Missouri event, also called the “Big BAM.” The event starts the weekend of June 10.

The official Big BAM Pre-Party begins in St. Joe on June 11, but local events organizers have come together to make a full weekend of entertainment for visitors and residents alike.

On the 12th, cyclists will embark on the first leg of the 6-day, 300-mile trek. The route crosses through Hamilton, Chillicothe, Brookfield, Macon, Shelbina and ends in Hannibal June 17.

Beth Carmichael with the St. Joseph Visitors Bureau said “Big Bam was just the icing on the cake in terms of activities scheduled for this weekend. The Coleman Hawkins Jazz Festival, Juneteenth Celebration, and Art in the Park were already planned. We’re calling it Jammin’ & Bammin’ in Saint Jo!”

Carmichael says the bicycle events will draw about 600 cyclists into the area.

There are a lot of events planned that weekend:
Kick off of the 2016-17 Sculpture Walk (Opening reception Friday, June 10th)
Saturday offers a walking tour of the new sculptures.
The St. Joseph Bicycle Club is hosting a Mystery History Ride.
A wine tasting and farm to table dinner hosted by the Albrecht-Kemper Museum of Art.
The 2016 Coleman Hawkins Jazz Festival at Coleman Hawkins Park all weekend.
Juneteenth commemoration including the Down to Earth Riders and a picnic.
Midwest Artists Association hosts Art in the Park sale at Civic Center Park.
The Big Bam party at Heritage Park includes live music from the Kris Lager Band.

All of the activities are open to the general public.

For more information on weekend events in St. Joseph go to www.StJoMo.com/BigBam or call 816-233-6688; for more information on participating in Big Bam Week go to BigBamRide.com.

Andrew County bridge to be replaced

wpid-wpid-modot-logo-200x150-200x150.jpgWHITESVILLE, Mo. – Route 48 in Andrew County will soon close for a bridge replacement project.

Contractors from Widel, Inc., working with the Missouri Department of Transportation, plan to close the road to all traffic at the bridge over the Platte River on Monday, June 6th. The bridge is located just west of the town of Whitesville. The closure is anticipated to last until the middle of October 2016.

During the closure, motorists will be directed over a signed detour on Route D, Route E, U.S. Route 169 and Route M.

All work is weather permitting and schedules are subject to change. MoDOT encourages all motorists to slow down, buckle up, eliminate distractions and drive safely to ensure everyone is able to Arrive Alive.

St. Joe man pleads guilty to charges he used stolen federal evidence in local medical bill lawsuits

USDOJ coinA St Joseph man faces up to 20 years in prison for using evidence stolen from federal investigations in his own court battle over medical bills. Federal officials are quick to note a thorough audit of the crime lab where Byron Gorman was being trained turned up “no inconsistencies, errors, or issues.”

Gorman, 51, of St. Joseph, pleaded guilty Tuesday before U.S. District Judge Dean Whipple to the charge contained in a Sept. 10, 2015, federal indictment.

In a news release, federal prosecutors say Gorman stole five blank U.S. Postal Service money order receipts from the scene of an investigation in Kansas City, Kansas.

Those blanks were contrived as evidence that Mr Gorman had paid medical bills incurred at the Heartland Regional Medical Center in St. Joseph. Gorman claimed that he had submitted postal money orders to his creditors, but the payments had not posted. Gorman also used the stolen money order receipts and other fraudulent documents he created as evidence in a lawsuit he caused to be filed against his creditors.

Gorman was employed as an information technology specialist for the U.S.D.A.’s Office of Inspector General, assigned to the Heart of America Regional Computer Forensics Laboratory in Kansas City, Mo., where he was being trained to become a computer forensic examiner. Upon learning of the allegations regarding Gorman, the lab did a complete and thorough review of any cases which Gorman may have assisted in the examination of computer forensic evidence. No inconsistencies, errors or issues were noted with any evidence.

Under federal statutes, Gorman is subject to a sentence of up to 20 years in federal prison without parole. The maximum statutory sentence is prescribed by Congress and is provided here for informational purposes, as the sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the court based on the advisory sentencing guidelines and other statutory factors. A sentencing hearing will be scheduled after the completion of a presentence investigation by the United States Probation Office.

Pair sentenced for $93,000 drug deal

USDOJ bas relief logoTwo Kansas City area men who set up a $93,000 drug deal have been sentenced to federal prison.

Timothy Wilson, 51, Kansas City, Mo., and John Hernandez, 38, Kansas City, Kan., pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to distribute cocaine. Acting U.S. Attorney for Kansas Tom Beall says Wilson was sentenced Wednesday to 90 months in federal prison. Hernandez was sentenced Tuesday to 57 months.

In their pleas, they admitted they arranged to buy three kilograms of cocaine at a price of $31,000 per kilogram. They were not aware that the sellers were undercover agents of Immigration and Customs Enforcement from El Paso, Texas. Wilson and Hernandez were arrested Sept. 3, 2015, in the parking lot of a Mexican restaurant at 542 Southwest Boulevard in Kansas City, Kan., when they attempted to exchange the money for the cocaine.

No-contest plea entered for assaulting father, 76, and threatening deputies

Timothy R Detrick
Timothy R Detrick
A Kansas man is scheduled for sentencing next month after pleaded no contest to charges stemming from a lengthy standoff at a home in Tonganoxie. Timothy Ryan Detrick, 40, of Tonganoxie, entered no-contest pleas to two counts Wednesday in Levenworth County District Court.

The Sheriff’s office and Tonganoxie police responded to a house on River Drive in Tonganoxie on February 3, after the defendant struck his 76-year-old father with a metal bar.

After a five hour standoff, members of the Leavenworth County Tactical Unit were called in to remove Detrick by force from the residence. While he was being removed, officials say Detrick made statements to the effect that he would kill the officers involved.

A judge scheduled sentencing June 22 on one count of aggravated battery and one count of making a criminal threat to a deputy.

Search of vehicle leads to drug charges against weapons suspect

Kimberly S Brandes
Kimberly S Brandes

A Chillicothe woman arrested for alleged unlawful possession of a firearm now faces drug charges.

Livingston County Sheriff Steve Cox says Kimberly Brandes was arrested May 17 and charged with the weapons charge. But Cox says their subsequent investigation included securing a vehicle and later searching it. Cox says they seized methamphetamine and drug paraphernalia.

Ms. Brandes now faces an additional class-C felony count of possession of controlled substance, filed May 24 in Livingston County Court.

Ms. Brandes remains incarcerated in the Daviess/Dekalb County Regional Jail on the 2 alleged felony violations with a total bond of $22,500.

Single vehicle crash injures Chillicothe woman

MSHP badgeA rollover crash in Daviess County Tuesday morning left a Chillicothe woman with moderate injuries.

The crash report from the Missouri State Highway Patrol indicates that Jamie Murphy was driving along Missouri HIghway 13 north of Coffey at 7:30 a.m. when she lost control of her vehicle. The Volkswagen Beetle left the roadway, went down an embankment, and overturned before coming to rest on its wheels.

Ms Murphy, 43, was taken to the Harrison County Community Hospital in Bethany by private vehicle.

Teens injured in Caldwell County rollover crash

MSHP purpleTwo teens from Breckenridge, Missouri were injured, one of them seriously, in a crash in Caldwell County Tuesday night.

The Missouri State Highway Patrol says Nicholas Kelsey, 19, was trying to pass another vehicle on Des Moines Road, but his vehicle instead side-swiped the other, ran off the road, hit an embankment and overturned.

Kelsey was transported to the Truman Medical Center in Kansas City, Missouri with serious injuries. The other driver, 15-year-old Raven Kepner, suffered what were described at the scene of the crash as minor injuries. Kepner was transported to Cameron Regional Medical Center.

The accident happened about three miles west of Breckenridge at 7:14 p.m. according to the MSHP crash report.

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