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Man pleads guilty in scam against elderly Norfolk couple

A man pleaded guilty to two felony charges this week.
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NORFOLK, Va. — A man has pleaded guilty to two felony fraud charges after participating in a scam against an elderly couple last year.

Daylan Kiree Bates, 24, pleaded guilty on Tuesday to the charges. The Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office in Norfolk said he participated in a banking scam last year in which he transferred thousands of dollars from an elderly couple’s bank account into his own.

On Oct. 5, 2023, an unknown individual called the couple using a false caller ID and falsely identified as a representative from the couple’s credit union’s fraud department. The scam caller told the victims that their account had been flagged for suspicious transactions and that money that was not theirs was being fraudulently wired into their account.

At some point, the caller had the victims share over the phone an authentication passcode allowing the scam caller access to the victims’ credit union account. The next day, the caller contacted the victims again claiming to have completed a fraud investigation, removed the money (that rightfully belonged to the victims) from their account, and that police in another jurisdiction would follow up on the alleged fraud investigation. At that point, tens of thousands of dollars had been stolen from the couple’s credit union account.

Of the stolen money, $18,000 was found to have been transferred to Bates’ account, the Commonwealth’s Attorney’s Office said. Bates withdrew some of that money from his account in various ways, including sometimes going to the credit union in person. On Oct. 7, Bates showed up to the credit union after discovering his account had been frozen by the bank due to his suspicious activity, and an employee called Norfolk Police officers to report Bates for fraud.

Detectives spoke with the victims, who explained the phone scam, and with managers at the credit union, who authenticated the victims’ bank account records. Using that information, detectives secured charges against Bates for obtaining money by false pretenses and computer fraud. The credit union made the victims’ account whole again.

Bates pleaded guilty as charged to both felonies. There is no agreement regarding his sentence. His sentencing hearing is set for on Nov. 8.

“In a world of online transactions and online banking, criminal actors do not need a gun to steal; they can steal thousands of dollars with a smartphone,” said Commonwealth’s Attorney Ramin Fatehi. “Financial crimes may not involve violence, but they ruin lives, and they are serious crimes. We intend to seek a sentence against Mr. Bates that fits the seriousness of his offense.”

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