Crime & Safety

5 Charged In San Diego With Stealing Benefits From Low Income Families

Prosecutors say stores in National City, Sherman Heights, and El Cajon were targeted.

SAN DIEGO, CA — Five men were charged by San Diego federal prosecutors with stealing "tens of thousands of dollars" in public-assistance benefits from low-income families, it was announced Tuesday.

According to the U.S. Attorney's Office, the defendants used card skimmer devices to steal account information from recipients of state-issued Electronic Benefit Transfer cards. The skimming devices were typically placed on ATMs or stores' card-swiping machines to copy recipients' info, then the stolen info was used to create "cloned" cards.

Prosecutors say stores in National City, Sherman Heights, and El Cajon were targeted.

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Prosecutors said one of the victims is a local single mother of four "whose EBT account was drained in early June," depriving her of money needed to buy diapers and pay rent.

Two of the defendants — Constantin Irimia, 40, of Iasi City, Romania, and Devonte Linell Pipkins, 25, of Ecorse, Michigan — appeared in court Tuesday morning. The three other defendants — Radu Grosu, 35, of Rockville, Maryland; Gabriel Ionita, 35, of Bucharest, Romania; and Richard Calin, 23, of Bucharest, Romania — are set to appear in court on Friday.

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Stolen EBT account information has resulted in the theft of nearly $40 million since August 2022, according to the California Department of Social Services.

— City News Service