Anchorage, Alaska – U.S. Attorney Bryan Schroder announced
today that an officer of the U.S. Army has been charged for allegedly
defrauding insurance providers to obtain hundreds of thousands of dollars in
fraudulent insurance payments.
Christopher James DeMure, 40, a Lieutenant Colonel in the
U.S. Army, has been named in a criminal complaint charging him with mail fraud,
wire fraud, and money laundering. DeMure
was arrested this morning and is expected to make his initial appearance on the
charges tomorrow afternoon.
The complaint alleges that, from September 2014 until
February 2018, DeMure engaged in a scheme to defraud USAA Federal Savings Bank
(USAA) and American Express (AMEX) to obtain insurance payments by submitting
fraudulent claims and other fraudulent documents. DeMure spent much of the insurance payout
money to pay off automobile loans, credit cards, mortgage loans, and other
personal debts and expenses, including a 2016 Chevrolet Suburban and a 2016 Audi
A7. In all, DeMure’s fraudulent insurance
claims allegedly sought payments in the amount of approximately $475,000, and
that DeMure has actually received approximately $394,000, from USAA and AMEX,
combined.
More specifically, it is alleged that DeMure purchased items
of value, such as jewelry, performance bicycles, clothing, and electronics that
were later the subject of insurance claims that he filed with USAA and/or
AMEX. On multiple occasions, DeMure
cancelled an online order for or physically returned items for a full refund,
and thereafter listed those same items on a fraudulent insurance claim with
USAA and/or AMEX, wherein he falsely claimed that the item was lost, misplaced,
and/or stolen. Beginning in October
2015, DeMure began to file parallel fraudulent insurance claims for certain
items with both USAA and AMEX. In some
cases, DeMure provided different explanations for the loss, misplacement, or
theft of those items to USAA and AMEX.
DeMure’s scheme to defraud involved at least seven separate
loss incidents. For example, in July
2016, DeMure moved from Fort Benning, Georgia, to Joint Base
Elmendorf-Richardson, Alaska. The U.S.
Army paid for a company to pack and move DeMure’s residential household goods
from Georgia to Alaska. Those household
goods were packed by the moving company on July 13, 2016. On July 21, 2016, DeMure contacted USAA and
claimed that a U-Haul trailer that he had rented had been burglarized in
Louisville, Kentucky, where he stopped on the way to Indiana. DeMure claimed the loss amount was
$215,317.68. The following day DeMure
contacted the Louisville Metro Police Department to report the burglary. In his USAA claim, DeMure identified numerous
items as having been stolen from the U-Haul in Louisville, ranging from jewelry
to performance bicycles. The jewelry
items included a Tiffany & Co. necklace that DeMure told USAA was a family
heirloom, which had an appraised value of $35,000. In fact, business records show that DeMure
purchased the necklace on June 1, 2016, had it appraised on June 15, 2016, returned
it on July 6, 2016, and on July 11, 2016, had it insured by USAA. Altogether, DeMure received an overall
payment benefit of $183,339.73 from the claims he filed with USAA and AMEX
related to the purported July 20, 2016, U-Haul burglary.
The complaint further alleges that some of the supporting
documents that DeMure submitted to USAA and AMEX were fraudulent. For example, in support of an insurance
claim, DeMure allegedly submitted a fake Palmer Police Department report to
AMEX to evidence the loss incident in question.
If convicted, DeMure faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in
prison and a fine of $250,000, or both, for the most serious charges alleged in
the complaint. Under federal sentencing
statutes, the actual sentence imposed will be based upon the seriousness of the
offenses and the prior criminal history, if any, of the defendant.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) conducted the
investigation leading to the charges in this case, with assistance from the
U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command (commonly known as CID). This case is being prosecuted by Assistant
U.S. Attorney Andrea W. Hattan.
A complaint is only a charge and is not evidence of
guilt. A defendant is presumed innocent
and is entitled to a fair trial at which the government must prove guilt beyond
a reasonable doubt.
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