Advertisement

Awards for their tenacity

Police sergeants’ identity theft investigation led them to Texas, where they met multiple hurdles to arrest a suspect.

December 03, 2008|By Joseph Serna

There was a point during Sgt. Tony Frisbee and Sgt. Shaun Devlin’s identity theft investigation earlier this year where new victims were coming in almost daily.

Most of the cases had similar characteristics: Victims’ Social Security numbers were used to file false tax returns, the returns were sent to Texas and the victims all belonged to the same healthcare provider.

While the UCI detectives weren’t over their heads yet, the case threatened to become almost too much to handle.

“In the beginning, the size of the case, the amount of victims we had, it was like ‘Wow,’” Devlin said. “Tony and I felt like we had to get a jump on this.”

Advertisement

And jump they did, headfirst as one investigator put it, into the world of fraud investigation.

Through a five-month investigation that took UCI officers halfway across the country on multiple occasions, authorities managed to net half a dozen indictments and several arrests that revealed an identity-theft ring that victimized nearly 200 UCI graduate students earlier this year.

Devlin and Frisbee, the two lead detectives on the case, were recognized as the 2008 Investigators of the Year by the Orange County Financial Crimes Investigator Assn. last week. They credited their team, Det. Caroline Altamirano, Sgt. Manse Sinkey and IT Manager Isaac Straley for their efforts as well.

“We felt as a committee they certainly did deserve a lot of recognition,” said Meloni McMinimy, a board member on the association. “Bottom line, it was their tenacity.”

Damon Tucker, a 10-year veteran of law enforcement, nominated the men after working with them.

“It seemed like a pretty big and sophisticated case, and seemed to be a daunting task for an agency that size,” Tucker said. “They went beyond the call of duty on this one. We could have simply said we don’t have the resources or technical ability to do something like this.”

The men had to work out logistics with Texas law enforcement so they could operate on their turf, and in some cases ask for help, officers said. Getting to that point was a hassle too, officials said. An exhaustive search for a breach in UCI’s student databases turned up empty. From there, all signs pointed to the United Healthcare in Texas, UCI’s third-party healthcare provider.

Daily Pilot Articles
|
|
|