SOME DETAILS ABOUT TAMARA WILLIAM’S CASE WE MISSED

DA VANCE: RINGLEADER OF IDENTITY THEFT RING CONVICTED OF STEALING HUNDREDS OF DESIGNER BAGS AND SHOES FROM SAKS FIFTH AVENUE

Three Other Members of ID Theft Ring and One “Shopper” Have Previously Pleaded Guilty

Pictured: Shoes and handbags fraudulently purchased at Saks Fifth Avenue as part of the scheme

Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., today announced the guilty plea of TAMARA WILLIAMS, 38, for her part in a scheme that used stolen personal identifying information from Saks Fifth Avenue customers to purchase approximately $430,000 in luxury goods from that store’s Midtown flagship store for later resale on the black market. WILLIAMS pleaded guilty to the top charge in the indictment against her, Grand Larceny in the Second Degree, as well as Identity Theft and Scheme to Defraud, both in the First Degree.

Co-defendants KRISS ROCKSON, JASON CHANCE, MICHAEL KNIGHT-WILLIAMS, and CHRISTINA KIPP have previously pleaded guilty and were sentenced to serve state prison time, jail and, in many cases, ordered to pay restitution.

“This defendant was the leader of an identity theft ring that stole more than 200 shoes and 80 bags and accessories from Saks Fifth Avenue in the span of approximately four months,” said District Attorney Vance. “As cybercrime and identity theft evolve, so do the tools needed to fight them. Williams and the sales associates in this case were all charged with Identity Theft in the First Degree. However, under current laws, a criminal who uses the identity of one victim to steal $2,000 faces the same top charge as the defendant who assumes the identity of 250 victims to steal $500,000. This does not reflect the enormous impact that identity theft is having on innocent people and businesses today. That’s why I will continue to call for the law to be strengthened to enable the aggregation of theft amounts across victims, leading to sentences that more appropriately reflect the severity of the crime.”


According to the defendant’s guilty plea and statements made on the record in court, between April and August of 2014, WILLIAMS provided the personal identifying information, including Social Security numbers and dates of birth, of more than 20 Saks Fifth Avenue credit card account holders to ROCKSON, CHANCE, and KNIGHT-WILLIAMS, who were then employed as sales associates at the department store. The employees would then use the stolen information to purchase luxury goods that WILLIAMS pre-selected from designer brands, including Chanel, Valentino, Christian Louboutin, Ferragamo, Balmain, YSL, Gucci, Giuseppe Zanotti, Kate Spade, Louis Vuitton, and Givenchy.

In some cases, the sales associates would then provide the fraudulently purchased merchandise to a group of “shoppers,” who were recruited by WILLIAMS to impersonate Saks accountholders. These three individuals received the merchandise that was pre-purchased by the sales associates, and then met WILLIAMS at designated places, such as hair salons and gas stations in Queens, to hand-off the stolen merchandise, which was then resold on the black market.

As part of the scheme, the shoppers were also sometimes instructed to return certain stolen property to Saks Fifth Avenue in exchange for store gift cards, which were then resold for profit or used as payment for the shoppers’ services. One of the shoppers, CHRISTINA KIPP, previously pleaded guilty. The cases against the other two shoppers remain open.

In all, this identity theft ring is responsible for approximately $430,000 in fraudulent purchases over the course of 91 distinct transactions. No physical credit card was ever presented; instead, the stolen credit card information was manually entered into the system by the sales associates who processed the transactions. In some instances, no customer was present at the checkout counter during the purchase.

Assistant District Attorneys Sophi Jacobs and Michael Murray handled the prosecution of the case, under the supervision of Assistant District Attorneys Jeremy Glickman and Tracy Conn, Deputy Chiefs of the Cybercrime and Identity Theft Bureau, Brenda Fischer, Chief of the Cybercrime and Identity Theft Bureau, and Executive Assistant District Attorney David Szuchman, Chief of the Investigation Division. Cybercrime Analyst Vitali Kremez; Investigators Daniel Murphy, Michelle Moy, and Mariangela Perrotta; Supervising Investigators Jonathan Reid and Robert Muldoon; Senior Investigators Richard Breece and Reginald Barometre; and Detective Marisa Valle-Zarakas assisted with the case.

District Attorney Vance thanked the United States Secret Service, particularly Special Agent Matthew Wagner, Access Device Fraud Squad; U.S. Department of Homeland Security Investigations, particularly Special Agent Todd Kowalski, Violent Gang Unit; and Saks Fifth Avenue, for their assistance with the case.

Defendant Information:

TAMARA WILLIAMS, D.O.B. 7/2/1977
Queens, NY

Convicted:
• Grand Larceny in the Second Degree, a class C felony, 1 count
• Identity Theft in the First Degree, a class D felony, 1 count
• Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, a class E felony, 1 count

KRISS ROCKSON, D.O.B. 6/16/1968
Queens, NY

Convicted:
• Grand Larceny in the Second Degree, a class C felony, 1 count
• Identity Theft in the First Degree, a class D felony, 1 count
• Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, a class E felony, 1 count

Sentenced:
• 1 2/3 to 5 years state prison

JASON CHANCE, D.O.B. 1/4/1989
Valley Stream, NY

Convicted:
• Identity Theft in the First Degree, a class D felony, 1 count
• Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, a class E felony, 1 count

Sentenced:
• 6 months jail
• 5 years post-release supervision
• $33,000 restitution

MICHAEL KNIGHT-WILLIAMS, D.O.B. 6/14/1970
Queens, NY

Convicted:
• Identity Theft in the First Degree, a class D felony, 1 count
• Scheme to Defraud in the First Degree, a class E felony, 1 count

Sentenced:
• 4 months jail
• 5 years post-release supervision
• $23,000 restitution

CHRISTINA KIPP, D.O.B. 9/18/1992
Queens, NY

Convicted:
• Grand Larceny in the Third Degree, a class D felony, 1 count
• Identity Theft in the Third Degree, a class A misdemeanor, 1 count

Sentenced:
• 1 year jail

7 thoughts on “SOME DETAILS ABOUT TAMARA WILLIAM’S CASE WE MISSED

  1. Sorry for them but am just waiting for the next batch to get caught snappchat and Instagram is real prove wait dey man . All dogs bark loud . At least this girl never hype she wos moving in silence.

  2. Yikes! Imagine how many transactions they didn’t consider “distinct.”

    Do your time and come back reformed, don’t go back to the same nonsense.

  3. Them wont stop because the time them getting is not long. Them rub them time come out and do it again

  4. The $33,000 could a buy the shoes and dem free but jAil and $33,000 shoe off nuh pay better you did save up that money cause didn’t they tek some of the shoes dem find

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