Charlotte woman pleads guilty to orchestrating a $1.9 million debt collection scheme

 

Date: December 11, 2020

Contact: newsroom@ci.irs.gov

Charlotte, NC — Matthew D. Line, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal Revenue Service, Criminal Investigation Division, Charlotte Field Office (IRS-CI), announced today that Carissa Eugenia Brown, of Charlotte, appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge David S. Cayer and pleaded guilty to orchestrating a $1.9 million debt collection scheme.

According to filed plea documents and today's plea hearing, from 2015 to July 2020, Brown executed a fraudulent debt collection scheme that defrauded hundreds of victims located in North Carolina and elsewhere in the United States. Court records show that, during the relevant time period, Brown had registered three companies in North Carolina, which she used in furtherance of the scheme: Accredited Recovery Solutions, LLC, (aka Accredited Recovery Network); Elite Credit Adjusters, LLC (aka Elite Credit Network); and Martin Recovery Group, LLC (aka Martin Recovery, P.C. and the Law Office of Martin and Associates).

As Brown admitted in court today, she operated her fraudulent debt collection scheme by contacting individuals who had been sued by various creditors for their outstanding debt and falsely represented that she was authorized to collect the debt on behalf of those creditors. Brown further admitted that she generally offered victims to "settle" the outstanding debt for a reduced amount, but only if the victims accepted the offer and paid the reduced amount in full, or began making immediately to one of Brown's companies. As court records show, Brown often mailed victims official-looking documents, including a purported settlement agreement. Victims then made a lump-sum payment, or several payments, to Brown and her companies, believing that doing so would resolve their debt and outstanding court case, only to later learn that Brown was not authorized to collect the debt and they still owed the full debt to the actual creditor.

To further induce victims to comply with the debt repayment demands, Brown sent correspondence to victims on letterhead that implied the communication was coming from a law firm, and left voicemails for victims falsely representing that she was calling from a law firm. In addition, Brown also employed threatening and harassing pressure tactics to fraudulently induce victims to pay her, including threatening to garnish victims' wages, to seize victims' bank accounts, or to file judgments in court if payment on the debt was not received.

As a result of the false and fraudulent representations and threatening and harassing tactics used by Brown, court documents show that hundreds of individuals throughout the United States were fraudulently induced to pay Brown and her companies more than $1.9 million. This resulted in victims being placed in the untenable position of either having to pay their debts twice, or face the financial consequences for failing to pay the true creditor.

Brown has pleaded guilty to wire fraud and money laundering and was released on bond. The wire fraud charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. The money laundering charge carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison, a $250,000 fine, or a fine of not more than twice the amount of criminally derived property. A sentencing date has not been set.

IRS-CI and USPIS conducted the investigation. Assistant United States Attorney Maria Vento, of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Charlotte, is prosecuting the case.