The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Philadelphia released the below information:
PHILADELPHIA
– United States Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero announced that Ari Tietolman, 50,
of Montréal, Canada, was sentenced to 10 years in prison, three years of
supervised release, $7,042.898.22 in restitution, and a $700 special assessment
by United States District Judge Gerald A. McHugh, all arising from Tietolman’s
operation of a massive scheme from Canada that targeted American senior
citizens with deceptive telemarketing calls for nearly a decade.
Tietolman was charged in 2017 by superseding indictment with
three counts of wire fraud and four counts of money laundering. He was
extradited from Canada to the United States in 2023 and pleaded guilty to all
seven counts against him in January of this year.
From 2005 to 2014, Tietolman directed his fraud scheme from
Montréal, Canada. In this scheme, Tietolman’s network of telemarketers sold
worthless or non-existent services and then debited the victims’ bank accounts
without their informed consent. Through this scheme, Tietolman and his
co-schemers, including codefendants Marc Roy Ferry and Adam Harper, took
millions of dollars from tens of thousands of senior citizens in the United
States.
Tietolman created a number of fraudulent companies that sold
purported fraud protection services, a purported prescription drug discount
card, and a purported discounted legal service. The products and services
offered by the fraudulent companies were worthless or non-existent.
After Tietolman obtained names and telephone numbers of elderly
Americans, he and Harper hired and instructed telemarketers to call these
elderly Americans to sell the worthless or non-existent products and services
offered by the fraud companies. Most of Tietolman’s telemarketers were based in
“boiler rooms” in and around Montréal. In addition, there was at least one
“boiler room” in India. Tietolman and Harper called these rooms “fulfillment
rooms.”
During their calls, Tietolman’s telemarketers made various
misrepresentations, such as stating that they were calling on behalf of, or
were affiliated with, the victim’s bank, the victim’s insurance company, or the
United States government. In addition, Tietolman’s telemarketers often misled
the consumers about the need for these products and services.
In addition to misrepresenting the value of the products being
marketed, Tietolman’s telemarketers also misrepresented the cost of these
products, sometimes telling consumers the products were free, or less expensive
than the amount that was ultimately debited from the consumers’ bank accounts.
In other instances, the telemarketers assured consumers they would not debit
the consumers’ bank accounts and then did just that after the consumer provided
their bank account information.
As part of his fraud, Tietolman took extensive efforts to
conceal his involvement, using front companies, nominees, remotely created
checks (“RCCs”), and structured deposits. Furthermore, when the fraud was
detected but before a bank account was closed, Tietolman would sometimes
instruct his co-schemer Ferry to “hammer” the account, that is, deposit as many
checks as possible before the account was closed. Finally, knowing that banks
would close accounts used to facilitate fraud, Tietolman caused his co-schemers
to open accounts at several banks in the United States simultaneously, to make
sure that the scheme kept running even when one or more accounts were frozen or
closed.
Codefendants Marc Roy Ferry and Adam Harper previously entered
their guilty pleas in the case and are also awaiting sentencing. Both Ferry and
Harper have been released on bail conditions.
“Ari Tietolman directed an almost decade-long scheme that
scammed seniors out of millions of their hard-earned dollars,” said U.S.
Attorney Romero. “Specifically targeting the elderly because you consider them
easy prey is deplorable. My office and our partners at the FBI and IRS-CI are
determined to hold criminals like Tietolman accountable and protect older folks
from these callous crooks seeking to take advantage of them.”
“For nearly a decade, Ari Tietolman scammed senior citizens
across the country out of their life’s savings, even stooping so low as to sell
his victims purported services that would protect them from fraud,” said
Wayne A. Jacobs, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Philadelphia. “As this
sentencing shows, we at the FBI and our partners at the U.S. Attorney’s Office
and IRS – Criminal Investigation will pursue justice no matter where or when
federal crimes occur.”
The case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Revenue Service – Criminal Investigation and is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Vineet Gauri and Eric D. Gill. The Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs worked with law enforcement partners in Canada to secure the arrest and extradition of Tietolman to the United States.
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