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Secaucus Man, Three Others Charged With, Identity Theft, Bank Fraud Scheme

New Jersey

By: Yuritza Arroyo

Federal authorities announced that four people have been charged with conspiring to use and using victims’ personal identifiable information to defraud individuals and financial institutions.

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According to officials, Marc Lazarre, 37, of Secaucus, Fritzgerald Steide, 28, of Valley Stream, New York; Mohammed Khan, 32, of Elmont, New York; and Andrea Lewis, 29, of Inwood, New York, are each charged by indictment with one count of conspiracy to engage bank fraud.

Officials say Lazarre is also charged with one count of bank fraud and three counts of aggravated identity theft.

According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

From September 2021 through October 2022, Lazarre, Steide, Khan, and Lewis conspired to enrich themselves by fraudulently obtaining victims’ funds.

Court documents state, Lazarre utilized unlawfully obtained bank account and personal identifiable information to open accounts in victims’ names without their knowledge, caused the transfer of funds from the victims’ actual financial accounts to the accounts he opened, and then withdrew the funds.

Lazarre also unlawfully obtained or fabricated checks made out to victims used fraudulent identification documents to open accounts in names almost identical to the victims’ names, and then cashed the unlawfully obtained or fabricated checks.

According to authorities, Lazarre also worked with Steide and Khan, both of whom were employees of an Oceanside, New York, branch of a victim financial institution.

Lazarre sent victims’ personal identifiable information to Steide and Khan, who in turn used this information to determine whether those individuals had bank accounts with Steide and Khan’s employer.

Authorities say in Khan’s role as a customer service representative, he received documents that he knew reflected stolen personal identifiable information from Lazarre and subsequently opened bank accounts using that information.

Steide advised Lazarre regarding how to avoid detection, including by telling him when a conspirator should arrive at the bank to meet with Khan.

According to officials, Lewis impersonated numerous victims using false forms of identification provided by Lazarre.

On at least one occasion, Lewis communicated with Lazarre in real time for assistance with responding to a bank representative’s questions regarding her purported identity.

 

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