He took over the illegal fraudulent document business when his partner fled to Mexico
LOUISVILLE, Ky. - An Indiana man who operated a fake document business that enabled hundreds of illegal aliens to gain employment in the Louisville area was sentenced here Tuesday to two years in prison. This sentence is the result of an investigation conducted by agents with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE).
Jason Patrick Ross, 33, of 410 Lakeridge Drive, Henryville, Ind., was sentenced Nov. 27 by U.S. District Judge Thomas B. Russell to two years in prison and two years supervised release for conspiracy to possess and distribute false identification documents.
Ross pleaded guilty July 13 to the charges against him. He admitted that in March 2001, his brother-in-law introduced him to a fraudulent document maker known as "JL," and he began to refer customers directly to him. Initially, Ross received a $20 fee for each referral, which eventually increased to $40 per referral. Ross brought the identity photographs to JL's house in Louisville who produced fraudulent Social Security cards, and driver's licenses from Mexico and Michigan.
In March 2005, JL told Ross that he feared the FBI was following him and he was moving to Mexico. Ross then assumed JL's fraudulent document business. He charged $40 for a Social Security card, and $100 each for a green card, a Mexican driver's license, a Michigan driver's license, or an international driver's license.
Labels: Justice is served, The Impact of Illegals
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