DHS Employee Accused of Selling False Documents
A
Miami Department of Homeland Security employee was arrested for allegedly
trafficking in immigration documents and selling fraudulent Employment
Authorization Documents, or EAD cards. EAD
cards are required for non-U.S. citizens to work in the United States.
Federal
agents arrested Isidro Guerrero Fernandez in Georgia on November 12.
He was in Georgia to train to become a Homeland Security special agent, a
program he had started on November 6.
In
the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida’s criminal complaint,
Guerrero is accused of charging immigrants between $6,500 and $12,000 for an EAD
card that can be obtained legally for about $110.
Guerrero
had worked at the Miami office of U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services
since March 1998 and transferred to the Employment Authorization Documents
department in April 2002.
According
to the complaint, Guerrero worked with a Chilean man, Miguel Raggio, who would
allegedly meet the immigrants at a nearby restaurant and take them to the CIS
building. Guerrero would then take
the immigrants to illegally obtain their EAD cards.
Several
unidentified immigrants’ reports of illegal card sales instigated an
investigation on Guerrero. They
told officials that Raggio would take an immigrant’s passport along with an
initial payment and later meet them at a restaurant to collect the final
payment. Agents observed Guerrero
meet with several people to give them cards, and they stopped Raggio on November
12 after he met with someone who gave him $16,000 in down payments, according to
the complaint.
Raggio
admitted to agents that he was working with Guerrero after they found four legal
pads with names of foreigners, their registration numbers and several printouts
of names with dollar figures next to them.
After monitoring a phone call between the two men and recording a
discussion about Guerrero driving to Miami to collect the payments, agents
arrested the 32-year-old man at the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in
Glynco, Georgia.
The
government has charged Guerrero with conspiring with others to knowingly
transfer false federal identification documents, illegally obtaining the
Employment Authorization Documents, and soliciting and accepting bribes while
being a public official.
It
is unknown if Raggio was arrested, although he has previously been convicted of
entering the United States illegally and has twice been deported.
Guerrero made his initial appearance in a Brunswick, Georgia, federal court on November 13.
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