logo
Fraudster who carried around ‘bedazzled' gun sentenced to hard time over identity theft ring conviction

Fraudster who carried around ‘bedazzled' gun sentenced to hard time over identity theft ring conviction

New York Post26-06-2025
Some criminals live a life of crime — this one led several lives, 26 of them at least, according to federal prosecutors.
Jessica Bailey Sowell, 32, of Charlotte, was part of an identity theft ring that used stolen credit cards and fake driver's licenses to wrack up nearly a half-million dollars in debt, according to Russ Ferguson, US Attorney for the Western District of North Carolina.
While executing a search warrant in a hotel room where Sowell was staying, federal agents recovered a lavishly decorated weapon: 'a Taurus G3 9mm handgun, bedazzled with sequins on the barrel,' prosecutors added.
Advertisement
3 Investigators recovered a 'bedazzeld' gun from the hotel room from where a member of an identity theft ring was staying.
United States Attorney
Sowell ran up other people's tabs buying anything from everyday items at Target and Walmart to high-end clothing and luxury cars during a year-long crime spree across the south, according to officials and reports.
'Sowell created fraudulent identification documents with the stolen personal identifying information, which she used at banks, hotels, and retail stores to obtain money and merchandise, and to rent hotel rooms and cars,' federal prosecutors said.
Advertisement
'Over the course of the investigation, law enforcement found letters, bank cards, and checks in Sowell's possession that belonged to at least 26 victims of identity theft,' Ferguson said in a statement.
On Monday, she learned her fate.
'Sowell was sentenced to 57 months in prison followed by five years of supervised release for bank fraud, aggravated identity theft, and unlawful possession of a firearm,' according to prosecutors.
She was also ordered to pay restitution in the amount of $47,190.25.
Advertisement
3 Jessica Bailey Sowell, 32, of Charlotte, was part of an identity theft ring that used stolen credit cards and fake driver's licenses to make purchases.
United States Attorney
Investigators seized a suitcase containing hundreds of pieces of mail with various names and addresses, and a second suitcase was packed with store tagged merchandise.
Authorities also found two handwritten journals with the names and credit information of multiple victims; and 23 driver's licenses from different states with Sowell's photograph, according to prosecutors.
During a search of a rental vehicle Sowell was using, investigators found a credit card in the name of an ID theft victim, receipts for merchandise purchased with the victim's credit card, an identity card printer and multiple blank identity cards as well as holographic stickers, prosecutors said.
Advertisement
At one point during the investigation Sowell's accomplice made a daring escape leaping from a second story hotel window as police were closing in on him, according to The Charlotte Observer.
3 The Feds found fake drivers licenses, ID printing machines and holographic stickers as part of an investigation into an identity theft ring in North Carolina
Christopher Sadowski
Sowell's crime spree started in October 2018, prosecutors said, when she and her three accomplices used people's mail and real estate listings to steal their identities.
'The defendants used the stolen identities of real persons… to create identification cards in the victims' names, but with the defendants' photographs,' the indictment states. 'Prosecutors said they opened credit cards at places such as Lowe's, Walmart, Belk, Kohl's and Target, and purchased vehicles from multiple CarMax dealerships in the Carolinas, Tennessee and Georgia.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

A Bay Area man's trip to Nevada explains why local skies are about to burst with illegal fireworks
A Bay Area man's trip to Nevada explains why local skies are about to burst with illegal fireworks

San Francisco Chronicle​

time14 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

A Bay Area man's trip to Nevada explains why local skies are about to burst with illegal fireworks

With Independence Day approaching, Trevor did what he's done every year for the last decade. The 49-year-old Bay Area man rented a car and headed east. Four and a half hours later, he pulled into Bad Jack's Fireworks. 'You walk in the store and it's like a Walmart, but all fireworks,' he said of the nondescript warehouse on the Walker River Reservation in Schurz, Nev. Trevor, who asked to be identified by his first name only while acknowledging illegal conduct, represents an annual irritant to California officials seeking to cleanse the state of the bigger pyrotechnics that occasionally cause injuries and fires. Law enforcement agencies expend great effort to warn residents away from these products, only to see rockets and Roman candles flood in easily from Nevada and other places where they sell over-the-counter, then fill the night skies of cities from Livermore to Oakland to Santa Rosa. 'Probably 75% of the people in the store were from California,' Trevor said of Bad Jack's, chuckling. The sale completed, he hopped back into his car, returning across the border with about $1,100 worth of fireworks — enough, he said, for about three to four hours of entertainment at this year's cookout. Industry experts estimate that 13 stores immediately across the Nevada border account for at least 60% to 70% of the illegal fireworks used in the Golden State, where possession or sale of the devices is illegal without a special permit. In many parts of Nevada, as in California, fireworks are strictly regulated. But the stores popular with people like Trevor sell Class 1.4 G grade fireworks, which are legal under federal law but barred everywhere in California. And in a few places in Nevada, such as a specially approved 'shooter zone' in Pahrump, and on tribal reservations farther north, they are legal to set off. Nicole Varain, one of Bad Jack's owners, said in a phone interview that the store can't refuse to sell fireworks to Californians, because anyone can legally come onto the Walker River Reservation — home to the Northern Paiute people — and buy and set them off. The reservation has several launch sites, and many visitors come for an overnight fireworks display for Independence Day, she said. 'Everybody comes out here,' she said. Before his annual runs to Nevada, Trevor used to buy 'off the street,' until he realized it would be cheaper to cut out the middleman. The admission would probably make many Bay Area police officers, firefighters and quiet-seeking residents cringe. 'Fireworks are dangerous for a whole host of reasons,' said sheriff's Sgt. Phil Hallworth of San Mateo County, where even 'safe and sane' products like sparklers and fountains are banned in most jurisdictions, in part due to wildfire risk. 'While they may be thrilling to some, (they are) distressing to others.' Hallworth urged residents to attend county-sponsored celebrations. For those who plan to use fireworks in areas that allow them, he said, 'Just use some common sense. Keep a water hose handy, or a bucket. Never be afraid to call 911, if you see someone using illegal fireworks or if a fire does happen.' Every summer, San Francisco police officers are dispatched to hundreds of reports of fireworks, an average of more than 300 per month in June and July, according to a 2023 report from the city's civil grand jury. 'The San Francisco firework explosions booming around the city,' the report said, 'are more likely from fireworks that are illegal in California but which are for sale in the neighboring state of Nevada.' In recent weeks, police in San Francisco and Alameda County have seized thousands of pounds of illegal fireworks while making a spate of arrests. Last week in Alameda, where all fireworks are prohibited, police officers responded to a tip about fireworks sales at a storage facility. They reported discovering a unit crammed with more than 1,500 illegal goods. The stash included professional-grade explosives such as spinners, fountains, rockets and artillery shells, said Capt. Alan Kuboyama. He said detectives were trying to determine the source and intent for the fireworks, and that no arrests had been made. 'If we are able to make an arrest, we will focus on identifying their supplier so we can stop the inflow of illegal fireworks,' Kuboyama said in an email. Also last week, San Francisco police stopped a motorist driving a stolen U-Haul van in the Bayview neighborhood and discovered 'hundreds of illegal fireworks, including various rockets and barrel bombs,' according to a department news release. The driver, 38, was arrested on suspicion of auto theft charges, fireworks possession and 26 counts of illegal possession of explosives. SFPD Chief Paul Yep said the seized cache of fireworks could have caused 'untold destruction' in the city. This Tuesday afternoon, a similar incident played out in the Mission, after two San Francisco Sheriff's deputies received a notification about another stolen U-Haul van. Stop in Bayview of stolen @uhaul truck via @Flock_Safety hit leads to arrest of driver & passenger & seizure of 1,648 pounds of illegal fireworks w/help of @SFPD bomb squad, per @SheriffSF — Henry K. Lee (@henrykleeKTVU) July 3, 2025 Deputies found the van in the Bayview and stopped it, arresting its driver and another person, who were accused of 36 felony offenses. Members of SFPD's bomb squad then recovered 1,648 pounds of explosives from the back of the truck. 'At this time of year, no one is going to put a bunch of illegal fireworks in their minivan,' said John Ramirez, chief deputy at the San Francisco Sheriff's Office. 'It makes sense that they would use a stolen vehicle to transport these sorts of things.' Trevor, meanwhile, said he hadn't been worried about getting stopped by police while on his return trip from Bad Jack's. 'I don't drive crazy,' he said. 'Why would I get pulled over?' Anna Bauman contributed to this story.

Today in History: White mobs attacked Black residents in East St. Louis riots
Today in History: White mobs attacked Black residents in East St. Louis riots

Chicago Tribune

time2 days ago

  • Chicago Tribune

Today in History: White mobs attacked Black residents in East St. Louis riots

Today is Wednesday, July 2, the 183rd day of 2024. There are 182 days left in the year. Today's Highlight in History: On July 2, 1917, rioting erupted in East St. Louis, Illinois, as white mobs attacked Black residents; at least 50 and as many as 200 people, most of them Black, are believed to have died in the violence. Column: Let's not forget: Chicago had a 'Black Wall Street' tooAlso on this date: In 1776, the Continental Congress passed a resolution saying that 'these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be, free and independent States.' In 1881, President James A. Garfield was shot by Charles J. Guiteau (gee-TOH') at the Washington railroad station; Garfield died the following September. (Guiteau was hanged in June 1882.) In 1937, aviator Amelia Earhart and navigator Fred Noonan disappeared over the Pacific Ocean while attempting to make the first round-the-world flight along the equator. In 1962, the first Walmart store opened in Rogers, Arkansas. In 1964, President Lyndon B. Johnson signed into law a sweeping civil rights bill passed by Congress prohibiting discrimination and segregation based on race, color, sex, religion or national origin. In 1976, the U.S. Supreme Court, in Gregg v. Georgia, ruled 7-2 that the death penalty was not inherently cruel or unusual. In 1979, the Susan B. Anthony dollar coin was released to the public. In 1986, ruling in a pair of cases, the Supreme Court upheld affirmative action as a remedy for past job discrimination. In 1990, more than 1,400 Muslim pilgrims were killed in a stampede inside a pedestrian tunnel near Mecca, Saudi Arabia. In 2002, Steve Fossett became the first person to complete a solo circumnavigation of the world nonstop in a balloon. In 2018, rescue divers in Thailand found alive 12 boys and their soccer coach, who had been trapped by flooding as they explored a cave more than a week earlier. In 2020, British socialite Ghislaine Maxwell was arrested in New Hampshire on charges that she had helped lure at least three girls – one as young as 14 – to be sexually abused by the late financier Jeffrey Epstein. (Maxwell would be convicted on five of six counts.) In 2022, the police chief for the Uvalde, Texas, school district stepped down from his City Council seat amid criticism of his response to the mass shooting at an Uvalde elementary school in which 19 students and two teachers were slain on May 24 of that year. Today's Birthdays: Former Philippine first lady Imelda Marcos is 96. Actor Polly Holliday is 88. Racing Hall of Famer Richard Petty is 88. Former White House chief of staff and former New Hampshire governor John H. Sununu is 86. Writer-director-comedian Larry David is 78. Rock musician Roy Bittan (Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band) is 76. Actor Wendy Schaal is 71. Actor-model Jerry Hall is 69. Former baseball player Jose Canseco is 61. Race car driver Sam Hornish Jr. is 46. Former NHL center Joe Thornton is 46. Singer Michelle Branch is 42. Actor Vanessa Lee Chester is 41. Retired figure skater Johnny Weir is 41. Actor-singer Ashley Tisdale is 40. Actor Lindsay Lohan (LOH'-uhn) is 39. Former professional soccer player Alex Morgan is 36. Actor Margot Robbie is 35. Singer-rapper Saweetie is 32. U.S. Olympic swimming gold medalist Ryan Murphy is 30.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store