LOS ANGELES—Carl Edward Washington, a former California assemblyman
who represented the state’s 52nd district, has agreed to plead guilty to
federal bank fraud charges, admitting that he bilked financial
institutions by falsely claiming to be the victim of identity theft.
As part of a plea agreement filed yesterday in United States District
Court, Washington agreed to plead guilty to three counts of bank fraud
for causing losses of $193,661 to financial institutions that include
Farmers and Merchants Bank, First City Credit Union, and LA Financial
Credit Union.
Washington, 47, a resident of Paramount who currently is employed as a
division chief with the Los Angeles County Probation Department,
admitted in the plea agreement that during a lengthy scheme that ran
through the summer of 2011, he defrauded the three banks by concealing
several unpaid debts—debts that he simply stopped paying—and his overall
lack of creditworthiness.
Washington was able to hide his bad debts by filing a series of bogus
police reports with the Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department in
which he falsely claimed to be the victim of identity theft. After
filing the false police reports, Washington sent copies of the reports
to the credit reporting agency Experian and demanded that the
information relating to the bad debts be removed from his credit report.
Once Experian removed this data from his credit report, Washington
submitted applications for new credit cards to the victim banks,
applications that failed to disclose all of his outstanding debts and
the fact that he had negative information reported by other financial
institutions removed from his credit report. Once the victim banks
issued new credit cards to Washington, he purchased goods and services.
But, after making several payments, Washington contacted Experian and,
claiming that he was the victim of identity theft, requested that
information related to the new credit cards be removed from his credit
report. Washington admitted filing five false police reports with LASD.
Washington’s scheme was exposed when he attempted to refinance two
auto loans through LA Financial. When the credit union examined
Washington’s credit report, it discovered that the auto loans it had
previously issued were not showing up on his credit report. LA Financial
subsequently learned from Experian that Washington disputed he had
earlier sought to refinance his auto loans and that he claimed to be a
victim of identity theft. Because LA Financial knew Washington’s claims
were false, it froze Washington’s credit card account and reported him
to authorities.
Washington was elected to the California legislature in 1996 and he
served in the assembly until 2002. Washington later went to work for the
Los Angeles County Probation Department, where he ran a unit called
Intergovernmental Relations and Legislative Affairs. Washington has been
on administrative leave from the Probation Department since his arrest
in this case in September.
Washington is scheduled to enter his guilty pleas on Monday before
United States District Judge S. James Otero. Once he pleads guilty,
Washington will face a statutory maximum penalty of 30 years in federal
prison for each of the three bank fraud counts. However, the parties
have agreed that the United States Sentencing Guidelines call for a term
of imprisonment of one year to 18 months. The actual sentence will be
determined by Judge Otero later this year.
The case against Washington was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation’s Public Corruption Squad.
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