BAKER, LA - Acting United States Attorney April M. Leon announced that U.S. District Judge Brian A. Jackson sentenced Erin D. Jones, 49, of Baker, Louisiana, to 30 months in federal prison following her conviction for wire fraud. The Court further sentenced Jones to serve three years of supervised release following her term of imprisonment, ordered her to pay $334,092.03 in restitution, and entered a money judgment against the defendant for an additional $334,092.03.
According to admissions made as part of her guilty plea, Jones worked part-time at a small business in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, that provided truck and diesel engine repair services and was trusted to assist with the company’s book-keeping and accounting, among other tasks. Jones held bank accounts at JPMorgan Chase Bank and Hancock Whitney Bank (collectively, the “banks”), and the company also maintained a business bank account at Hancock Bank.
Beginning in or about May of 2019 and continuing through April of 2024, Jones knowingly executed a scheme to defraud the company and to obtain money by means of materially false and fraudulent pretenses, representations, and promises.
One of Jones’ job responsibilities was to retrieve the company’s mail from a post office box that the company maintained in Baton Rouge. Using her access to the post office box, she would retrieve checks that had been issued to the company and mailed to the company by its customers. The checks were drawn on the customers’ bank accounts at banks located across the country. After gaining control of each check, Jones would endorse the back of the check and deposit it into one of her own personal bank accounts, either by using an ATM or making a remote online deposit.
Jones concealed her scheme in several ways. On many occasions, she would use her access to the company’s accounting program to delete the underlying invoices that caused the company’s customers and vendors to make the payments.
Over the course of the scheme, Jones embezzled and fraudulently deposited approximately 431 checks payable to the company, totaling approximately $334,000.
Acting U.S. Attorney Leon stated, “Small businesses are the backbones of a local economy. Employees are entrusted with duties and responsibilities that contribute to those companies either thriving or failing. Therefore, prosecuting fraud at these establishments are important, and we join our federal and local law enforcement partners in prioritizing them accordingly. We truly appreciate the hard work of the United States Secret Service and East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office for their investigation of this financial crime and acknowledge the impact these prosecutions have on our small businesses and local economy when offenders are held accountable.”
“The U.S. Secret Service takes our mission to investigate financial crimes seriously. As a result of a true team effort between our amazing local law enforcement partners, federal prosecutors, and our agents, another fraudster was brought to justice. This individual abused their position of trust to steal from their company and its clients, and now they will face the consequences of those actions. This type of crime will not be tolerated in Louisiana, and the U.S. Secret Service is proud to stand with our partners to protect our citizens,” stated U.S. Secret Service SAIC James A. Kearns.
This matter was investigated by the East Baton Rouge Sheriff’s Office, with substantial assistance from the United States Secret Service, and was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Alan A. Stevens, who also serves as Senior Litigation Counsel.
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