Inmate impersonating billionaire steals $11m while in maximum security jail, buys a mansion with some of the money

Inmate impersonating billionaire steals $11m while in maximum security jail, buys a mansion with some of the money

A maximum security prison inmate, Arthur Lee Cofield Jr, is accused of stealing $11 million from billionaire Sidney Kimmel by using smuggled cell phones while in prison.

 

Arthur Lee Cofield Jr, 31, allegedly accessed the accounts of Sidney Kimmel, a media mogul, from a Georgia prison using contraband cell phones.

 

Cofield allegedly stole the identity of Kimmel, then withdrew eight-figure sums from his account to buy a $4.4 million property, according to reports from the Atlanta Journal.

 

Inmate impersonating billionaire steals $11m while in maximum security jail, buys a mansion with some of the money

 

The heist is one of the largest robberies committed from a US prison.

 

In an earlier hearing, federal prosecutors also said there was evidence that Cofield stole $2.25 million from an account belonging to Nicole Wertheim, wife of Florida billionaire Herbert Wertheim, the Journal reported.

 

Cofield, Eldridge Bennett, 65, and his daughter, Eliayah Bennett, 27, have all pleaded not guilty to charges of conspiracy to commit bank fraud and money laundering.

 

Cofield was able to obtain multiple identifiers for Sidney Kimmel using a smuggled cell phone and then gained access to his Charles Schwab account in June 2020.

 

He pretended to be the billionaire (pictured below) on the phone for a customer service representative to open a checking account.

 

Inmate impersonating billionaire steals $11m while in maximum security jail, buys a mansion with some of the money

 

With access to Kimmel’s driver’s license, a utility bill, and the help of a co-conspirator outside the prison, he was able to complete the verification process.

 

Shortly thereafter, he purchased 6,106 one-ounce American Gold Eagle coins for $10,998,859.92 from Money Metals Exchange, LLC.

 

He was able to hire a private security team to transport the coins via private plane to Atlanta on June 13, 2020.

 

In July, Eldridge Bennett and Eliayah Bennett found a six-bedroom house in Buckhead, Atlanta and offered the owner $4.4 million to buy their property, giving about $720,000 in cash as a down payment.

 

On September 1, 2020, Eldridge Bennet gave the remaining $3.7 million in cash to the landowner, federal authorities claimed, according to the Atlanta Journal.

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