Crime & Safety
LI Man Faked His Death To Avoid Jail Time: Nassau DA
The man was facing charges in other cases so he tried to fake his death, officials say, but there was a typo on his fake death certificate.
MINEOLA, NY — A Huntington man was arraigned Tuesday after authorities said he tried to fake his own death to avoid a possible jail sentence for previous crimes.
Robert Berger, 25, was arraigned on charges of offering a false instrument for filing. His bail was set at $1; he remains in custody for the previous crimes. He is due back in court July 29 and faces up to four years in prison if convicted on the new charge.
“Typos and formatting errors gave up what we allege is a forged death certificated that this defendant used to avoid accountability for other crimes,” said Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas in a statement. “Submitting fake documents to prosecutors is always a bad idea, and while he’d have been caught regardless, failure to use spell check made this alleged fraud especially glaring.”
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Berger was facing sentencing for two felony charges. On Dec. 12, 2018, he pleaded guilty to fourth-degree possession of stolen property for driving a stolen Lexus. On June 6, 2019, he pleaded guilty to third-degree attempted grand larceny for trying to steal a pickup truck.
Berger was supposed to be sentenced Oct. 22. However, Singas said that a representative from his former attorney, Meir Moza, told the court Berger died and would provide proof of death to have the sentences dismissed.
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Singas said on Oct. 28, Moza gave the DA's office a New Jersey death certificate for Berger, which said that he had killed himself by suffocation. Moza said he was given the death certificate by Berger's fiance.
The DA's office inspected the certificate, Singas said, and saw that the type's font style and size changed within the document. They also noticed a typo in the form, she said. The DA's office contacted the New Jersey Department of Health, Vital Statistics and Registry and confirmed the certificate was fraudulent, according to Singas.
After learning of the fraud, Singas said, Moza made an application to end his representation of Berger. The fraudulent certificate was also given to the Suffolk County district attorney, Singas said, in connection with criminal cases that were pending there.
Singas said Berger had left the state and was arrested Nov. 14 in Delaware County, Pennsylvania, on charges that included providing a false identity to law enforcement. He was extradited to Nassau County on Jan. 21.
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