Former Amazon Manager Sentenced for Stealing Nearly $10M; Used Funds to Purchase Home, Lambo and Other Luxury Cars

jagu

Rising Star
Platinum Member
I first thought she would be white to be able to steal that much.


https://www.msn.com/en-us/news/crim...p&cvid=aa9a846186ad4355ada5f858e2475fa6&ei=46


A former employee at Amazon in Georgia has been sentenced for stealing more than $9.4 million.

Kayricka Wortham worked as a manager for Amazon in Atlanta. She and six others have been charged in connection to what the Department of Justice calls a “scheme,” accusing them of fraud to steal millions of dollars from the online retail giant.

Worthman pled guilty to the charges late last year, according to officials, along with another Atlanta area resident.

U.S. Attorney Ryan K. Buchanan said Wortham and Demetrius Hines of Smyrna used their positions at the company and submitted fake invoices for fake vendors, causing Amazon to pay about $9.4 million to the pair and multiple co-conspirators, WSBTV News reported.

Wortham is accused of using her position as an operations manager at an Amazon warehouse to submit fake invoices for fake vendors, as well as using her supervisory position to approve both new vendors and payment, authorities say.

She was also called the “leader of the scheme” and accused of giving fake vendor information to unknowing subordinates, who put the information into the Amazon vendor system.

Wortham would then approve the fake vendors and let them submit invoices and receive payments from Amazon.

“Wortham and co-conspirators then submitted fictitious invoices to Amazon, falsely representing that the vendors had provided goods and services to Amazon. Wortham approved the invoices, causing Amazon to transfer millions in fraudulent proceeds to bank accounts controlled by her and her co-conspirators,” USDOJ said in a statement.

Wortham and co-conspirator Brittany Hudson paid for personal real estate and luxury cars, including buying a $1 million home in Smyrna.

USDOJ said the two bought a 2019 Lamborghini Urus, a 2021 Dodge Durango, a 2022 Tesla Model X, a 2018 Porsche Panamera, and a Kawasaki ZX636 motorcycle with the ill-gotten funds.

Wortham is also accused of recruiting fellow co-conspirators who worked at Amazon.

Together, the group stole personal information and then used it to commit fraud and submit fake vendor accounts. Then, they were paid in fraudulent proceeds as part of the scheme.

Wortham and Hudson were released from jail but continued to take part in criminal conduct, the USDOJ added.

“In January 2023, they were working with CRU Franchising Company to open a hookah lounge in Midtown Atlanta. During the due diligence to close the deal, CRU discovered and asked about the Amazon fraud charges against them. In response, Wortham and Hudson allegedly lied to CRU, claiming that their Amazon-related criminal charges were dismissed,” USDOJ said. “The two then emailed fraudulent court documents to CRU that purported to show dismissal of the charges and contained forged signatures of Chief U.S. District Judge Timothy C. Batten, Sr. and forged seals and signatures of the Clerk of the Court. Hudson also allegedly emailed CRU doctored bank statements and personal financial statements that fraudulently inflated the balances in her accounts to support the franchise deal.”

Other members of the conspiracy were indicted on June 20.

“A federal grand jury indicted Brittany Hudson, 37, of Atlanta, Georgia, and Jamar L. James, Sr., 47, of Calera, Alabama, for conspiracy, wire fraud, and money laundering, and Hudson for forging the signature of a federal judge and seal of the Court,” USDOJ said. “Darrel J. Burgo, 32, of Lawrenceville, Georgia, was charged in the same indictment with conspiracy, access device fraud, and aggravated identity theft. These charges are pending.”

Hines pled guilty on Nov. 30, 2022, and other co-conspirators plead guilty on June 27. However, none have been sentenced.

Wortham will have to serve 16 years in federal prison followed by three years of supervised release, in addition to having to pay back the stolen money to Amazon.

The Justice Department made Wortham forfeit more than $2.7 million from the fraudulent proceeds as well as the vehicles she purchased. She has been indicted for defrauding CRU and forging a federal judge’s signature and a seal of the court, those charges are still pending.
 
347404769_18357391705071629_7919492783636974682_n.jpg
 
I know someone who did this on a small er scale at Coke. Except they allegedly did it by saying the items being purchased were for charity and then selling some of the items purchased. For example, they would purchase 10 iPads but keep three and resale. From what I understand, he got caught due to an audit and the manager who signed off on it was also fired.

From the sound of this story, the accounts payable team had to be apart of this. I'm at a way smaller company, but faking vendor numbers alone wouldn't work. I guess someone from vendor management could be enough to pull this off but I don't see it. Then again Amazon may have more automated processes in place that would allow this to occur.
 
I know someone who did this on a small er scale at Coke. Except they allegedly did it by saying the items being purchased were for charity and then selling some of the items purchased. For example, they would purchase 10 iPads but keep three and resale. From what I understand, he got caught due to an audit and the manager who signed off on it was also fired.

From the sound of this story, the accounts payable team had to be apart of this. I'm at a way smaller company, but faking vendor numbers alone wouldn't work. I guess someone from vendor management could be enough to pull this off but I don't see it. Then again Amazon may have more automated processes in place that would allow this to occur.

I explained this in the social media thread. SHE is the Operations Manager. Her subordinates process those invoices. She had a girlfriend who submitted the invoices for her company (whether she was really delivering or not has not been discussed.) However the Manager also submitted invoices based on tax IDs / Social Security numbers from 2 other employees. (A Senior HR manager and someone in Loss Prevention)

I have not seen any info on how they were eventually caught cuz this went on for at least a year.
 
These companies books get audited all the time, and it was only a matter of that before they got caught. :smh:
 
This shit happens everywhere.

These idiots had a good scam, they just got too confident and greedy.

Run the game small so it is not noticeable.

Make the money…..then quit.

By the time they discover it, you will be long gone and they will take it as a loss due to a computer or human error.
Like $1M wasn’t enough
 
It's amazing that so many people literally don't know how to use their brains. You don't have to be a genius to know you can't spend like that if you can't back it up without taxpaid income. I think some of these people want to get jammed up, or they are just completely brainless. :dunno:
 
"USDOJ said the two bought a 2019 Lamborghini Urus, a 2021 Dodge Durango, a 2022 Tesla Model X, a 2018 Porsche Panamera, and a Kawasaki ZX636 motorcycle with the ill-gotten funds."

You really thought she was white, bro?..........
Yes, just from reading the topic where she scammed $10M. Massive fraud is inherently a white crime.
 
Do anyone remember a long time ago on here someone said they had a Lamborghini and someone posted a picture of a Lamb with wheels?
I think that was here.
 
A federal district court on Wednesday sentenced a former Amazon employee to 16 years in prison for a multimillion-dollar fraud against the tech giant, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia.

The sentencing of the ex-Amazon operations manager, Kayricka Wortham of Georgia, came roughly seven months after she entered a guilty plea to conspiring to commit wire fraud.

She led a multi-person scheme to defraud the tech company and steal over $9.4 million during her 1½ years with Amazon, the U.S. attorney’s office said.

Wortham and one of her alleged co-conspirators, Brittany Hudson, were in a relationship. They allegedly used money they stole to buy "expensive real estate and luxury cars, including a nearly $1 million home in Smyrna, Georgia; a 2019 Lamborghini Urus; a 2021 Dodge Durango; a 2022 Tesla Model X; a 2018 Porsche Panamera; and a Kawasaki ZX636 motorcycle," according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

Prosecutors claimed Wortham and others involved stole the money by "submitting fictitious invoices to Amazon, falsely representing that the vendors had provided goods and services to Amazon." They were able to do so after unwitting workers under Wortham’s supervision added them to the system with fraudulent information she gave them and subsequently approved, according to the U.S. attorney’s office.

Wortham has since turned over the home and vehicles she and Hudson allegedly purchased to authorities, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. They forfeited $2.7 million from bank accounts.

Wortham was also ordered to repay about $9.47 million to Amazon. The U.S. attorney’s office said she also faces additional outstanding charges related to an alleged attempt to defraud another company that involved "forging the signature of a federal judge and seal of the court." Those alleged crimes happened while she was out on bond and trying to mislead a "franchising company about the status of her criminal charges," U.S. Attorney Ryan Buchanan said in a statement.

On top of her 16 years of prison time, Wortham will have to serve three years probation after she's released. "This individual stole millions from a business that employed her, exploiting not only their trust, but our nation's financial systems," U.S. Secret Service Special Agent in Charge Steven Baisel said in a statement. "Thanks to the hard work of our partners in the U.S. attorney's office, her sentence reflects the seriousness of her crimes and sends a message that this kind of fraudulent activity will not be tolerated."

Hudson and two others have pending cases, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. Three others have pleaded guilty but have not been sentenced.

 
And why use the money in the States? Send it outside of the country asap. Buy houses, land and assets in tax haven countries. Buy a foreign passport through an investment scheme and get the fuck out after the first five or six millions...
 
The U.S. attorney’s office said she also faces additional outstanding charges related to an alleged attempt to defraud another company that involved "forging the signature of a federal judge and seal of the court." Those alleged crimes happened while she was out on bond and trying to mislead a "franchising company about the status of her criminal charges," U.S. Attorney Ryan Buchanan said in a statement.
 
Back
Top