LOS ANGELES – A former U.S. Postal Service mail carrier from Palmdale pleaded guilty Monday to federal criminal charges for scheming to steal more than $250,000 in unemployment insurance funds by making false claims of COVID-related job losses and for stealing debit cards intended for other people on his mail route.
Stephen Glover, 32, entered his plea in downtown Los Angeles to one count each of mail fraud and theft of mail by an officer or employee, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office.
U.S. District Judge Percy Anderson scheduled a Sept. 19 sentencing hearing, at which time Glover will face up to 20 years in federal prison on the mail fraud count and five years on the mail theft count.
From August 2020 to June 2021, while employed at the post office branch in Valencia, Glover schemed to defraud the California Employment Development Department out of hundreds of thousands of dollars in pandemic- related unemployment benefits. Glover’s co-schemers applied for unemployment benefits from EDD using false statements and sometimes using stolen identities. Based upon the bogus claims, EDD mailed out debit cards to addresses listed on the applications.
The fraudulent claims were federally funded through programs authorized by Congress in response to the pandemic, including the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance and Lost Wage Assistance programs.
Glover admitted to abusing his position as a USPS mail carrier by providing associates with addresses on his mail route, which were...
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