Police in the US have exposed two citizens who set up an arranged marriage on
the popular
Craigslist
website.
Benjamin Adams, a
Disneyland
employee in California, and Russian national Yuliya Kalinina stand accused of
marriage fraud after the woman posted ads on Craigslist seeking a "green card
marriage" with an American citizen for $15,000.
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Michael Godfrey, from the Cyber Crimes Centre in Fairfax, Virginia, started
an email conversation with Kalinina to see if it was serious.
The woman indicated that she was looking to get married "platonically" and
would pay $300 a month up to $15,000 until citizenship was granted.
Craigslist passed over details of the user's IP address leading to the
woman's identification. Kalinina's Gmail account was also traced to the same
address.
Kalinina married Adams in February 2006 and filed for citizenship status.
Agents raided their house in September 2006 and Kalinina admitted to setting up
the marriage as a backup plan in case her asylum plea failed.
Adams confessed that he had agreed to the marriage in exchange for a lease on
a new Ford Mustang, which he could not afford owing to a bad credit record.
The two were married by Kalinina's boyfriend Dmitri Chavkerov, who claimed
that he became a minister after signing up to an internet site.
The criminal case has just been opened to the public record. The pair face
five years in prison.
The case highlights the extent to which businesses are prepared to cooperate
with authorities when clear criminal conduct is demonstrated.
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