Showing posts with label aspiring. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aspiring. Show all posts

Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Attempted Extortion: Aspiring Actor’s New Role is Inmate

Attempted Extortion: Aspiring Actor’s New Role is Inmate
http://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/2013/december/attempted-extortion-aspiring-actors-new-role-is-inmate/image/extortion-note

Vivek Shah was pursuing an acting career when he thought of a better way to make money.





12/03/13


It was an outrageous plan worthy of a Hollywood thriller. But an aspiring actor’s real-life attempt to extort tens of millions of dollars from wealthy targets earned him decidedly bad reviews in federal court and a new role for the next seven years—as a prison inmate.


Vivek Shah was pursuing an acting career in Los Angeles in 2012 when he thought of a better way to make money than from the bit parts he had landed in movies. He planned to extort billionaires—a coal tycoon and movie producer among them—by threatening to kill members of their families if they didn’t pay.






“He was very ambitious,” said Special Agent Jim Lafferty, who works out of our Pittsburgh Division and specializes in white-collar crime. Shah, 26, attempted to extort more than $ 120 million from seven prominent victims, including movie producer Harvey Weinstein ($ 4 million demanded), Groupon co-founder Eric Lefkofsky ($ 16 million demanded), coal executive Chris Cline ($ 13 million demanded), and oil and gas billionaire Terry Pegula ($ 34 million demanded).


He chose victims after doing online research about the world’s wealthiest people, and his targets were instructed to wire money to offshore bank accounts. To set up those accounts, Shah needed a proof of address, so he established a post office box in Los Angeles using a fake driver’s license bearing the name Ray Amin.


“He had the fake ID created for the sole purpose of opening the PO Box,” Lafferty said. “He purchased it from someone who makes false IDs for underage college students.” Shah used various other means to avoid detection—conducting online research from public places that provided anonymous Wi-Fi, and using prepaid debit cards to purchase postage online for the extortion letters.


But things didn’t turn out like he planned. Shah had been involved in a domestic dispute with his roommate several weeks before he established the PO Box. When police were called to the scene in May 2012, they discovered the fake ID, which they checked against the FBI’s National Crime Information Center (NCIC) database. Shah told the officers he was an actor and that the bogus driver’s license was merely a prop. The NCIC check confirmed that no criminal activity was associated with the name Ray Amin.


Later, when agents discovered that “Ray Amin” had opened the PO Box connected with the extortion scheme, they ran their own NCIC check, and Shah’s name came back associated with Amin.


From there, agents were able to monitor Shah’s real online accounts, which led from California to Chicago, where video surveillance showed him mailing more extortion letters. The FBI Laboratory later matched his DNA with the letters. Shah was arrested in August 2012, pled guilty to the extortion scheme in May 2013, and was sentenced in September. Lafferty credits the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Southern District of West Virginia with helping to bring the investigation to a quick and successful resolution.


After his arrest, Shah claimed his plan was to draw attention to himself. “He imagined the case going public and him gaining notoriety and somehow benefitting from that,” Lafferty said. “That obviously didn’t happen.”


Although the fake ID quickly led agents to Shah, Lafferty noted that the crime was ill-advised from the start. “The technology and investigative capability the FBI and our partners possess would make it extremely difficult to pull off an extortion scheme like this,” he said. “He really never had a chance.”


Resource:
- Press release




All Stories




Read more about Attempted Extortion: Aspiring Actor’s New Role is Inmate and other interesting subjects concerning Crime and Justice at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Saturday, October 19, 2013

Piers Morgan, aspiring movie star


Watch out, Hollywood: Piers Morgan’s biggest remaining ambition in life is to make it in the movie business.


At a National Press Club event on Friday, CNN’s Morgan immediately responded to the question of what he still most wanted to accomplish with one word: “Movies.”  


“James Bond,” the “Piers Morgan Tonight” host added to laughs from the crowd. “[Daniel] Craig can’t go on forever.”


Morgan, who noted he made cameos in several movies such as “Flight” and “The Campaign” last year, said he feels his film career is “going well” at the moment. The CNN anchor also pointed out that he appeared twice in the movie “Flight,” which starred Denzel Washington and scored the actor an Oscar nomination for his lead role. And “so it was all going great” in his Hollywood career, Morgan said — except for the fact that fellow CNN anchor Wolf Blitzer scored a coveted role in the most recent Bond flick.


“But what really pissed me off was Wolf Blitzer got the cameo in ‘Skyfall,’ the Bond movie,” Morgan said at the event promoting his new book “Shooting Straight: Guns, Gays, God, and George Clooney.” “That really ate away at me.”


And Blitzer, Morgan said, doesn’t let him hear the end of it.


“Every time I see Wolf, and I’m sure I’ll bump into him at the bureau later, he always mentions it,” Morgan said. “He always says, How’s the movie career going?’ ‘Not bad.’ And he says, ‘Remember I was in ‘Skyfall.’ It grossed a billion dollars.’”




POLITICO – CLICK – Full Blog



Piers Morgan, aspiring movie star