Canadians indicted in US ATM fraud could have stolen almost $250K, say documents
MONTPELIER, Vt. — Four Canadians facing charges they crossed into the United States to fraudulently skim money from ATM machines in Vermont could have stolen almost $250,000, U.S. court documents say.
A federal grand jury in Burlington indicted the four men late Thursday on a charge they acquired bank account information belonging to others and put it on the magnetic strips of gift cards that were then used at ATMs in the Burlington area to get cash advances.
Prosecutors initially said they obtained about $54,000 fraudulently in cross-the-border travels from March through October, but more recent court documents say 378 gift cards found in a storage unit in Vermont could have potentially been used to steal $680 each, raising the total to nearly $250,000. The operation also could have been going on much longer than previously believed, the documents say.
“The fact that tens of thousands of dollars was simply left in the storage unit (alongside the tools of the fraud trade) while the conspirators returned to Canada strongly suggests that they were stealing far more than that over the course of the scheme,” prosecutors said in a court filing arguing the four suspects should remain in custody pending trial.


