News and Press Releases

Bulgarian National and Florida Woman Get 10 Years in Prison for Multi-State Bank Fraud and Identity Theft

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
October 22 , 2012

BIRMINGHAM – A federal judge today sentenced a Bulgarian man and a Florida woman for their part in a multi-state operation in which they secretly skimmed bank customers’ identification at ATMs and used the stolen information to create hundreds of counterfeit debit cards, announced U.S. Attorney Joyce White Vance and U.S. Secret Service Special Agent in Charge Roy Sexton.

Chief U.S. District Judge Sharon Lovelace Blackburn sentenced both ANTONIO VELIKOV, 41, and MARIANA BISEROVA PASHOVA, 35, to 10 years and one month in prison. Both pleaded guilty in June to charges of bank fraud, possession of more than 300 counterfeit credit or debit cards, and aggravated identity theft. Their fraud cost Bank of America at least $862,478. In separate plea agreements with the government, the duo agreed to pay that amount in restitution to Bank of America.

Hoover Police arrested Velikov and Pashova in May 2011 as the two were attempting to place a camouflaged skimmer on a Regions Bank ATM. A skimmer is a credit or debit card reader and information-storage device. The Hoover Police recovered the device and contacted the Secret Service.

“This pair was involved in ATM skimming operations in six Southern states, including Alabama,” Vance said. “Heads-up law enforcement by Hoover Police and the Secret Service put an end to this duo’s multi-state financial crime spree,” she said. “Today’s sentence reflects the serious nature of their financial crimes. We have put an end to the threat these people posed throughout Southeast.”

Velikov and Pashova were part of an organized group of individuals who traveled from state to state placing skimmers and cameras on ATM machines to harvest account information and Personal Identification Numbers from debit and credit cards, according to their plea agreements. The pair used the stolen information to create counterfeit cards and steal money from the accounts associated with those cards.

More than $50,000 in cash, a magnetic-stripe encoder that could write stolen card information onto counterfeit debit or credit cards, a camouflaged skimmer, laptop computers, computer accessories, and 340 counterfeit cards were recovered in a search of the Birmingham hotel room where Velikov and Pashova were staying on the day of their arrest.

The federal districts outside of Alabama where Velikov’s and Pashova’s group placed skimmers and PIN-recording devices on Bank of America ATMS included: the Eastern, Middle and Western Districts of North Carolina; the Middle and Southern Districts of Florida; the Eastern District of Virginia; the Eastern and Middle Districts of Tennessee and the District of South Carolina. U.S. Attorney’s Offices, U.S. Secret Service Agents and Bank of America security personnel from these areas assisted in securing the 10-district plea agreements.

Hoover Police and the U.S. Secret Service investigated the case, which Assistant U.S. Attorney Melissa K. Atwood is prosecuting.

 

 

 

 

 

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