A Florida man who posed as an immigration lawyer, filing hundreds of fraudulent asylum applications and collecting more than $411,000 from unwitting clients, has been sentenced to more than 20 years in prison, federal prosecutors said.
The woman first identified herself to the man as a lawyer in 2016 despite not being licensed to practice.
Galjour was arrested in Dec. 2019. In addition to the fraud and license raps, she had also been charged with theft, laundering money in an amount greater than $100,000, exploitation of the infirm, three counts of bank fraud and two other counts of theft. The other charges were dropped on Monday, according to Nola.com.
In 2016, Galjour first identified herself to the man as a lawyer despite not being licensed to practice. She gained the unsuspecting man’s trust and convinced him to give her power of attorney, according to prosecutors.
Kristina Galjour was sentenced to 20 years in prison on Monday for draining the trust fund of a special needs man in Jefferson Parish.
Galjour ultimately convinced the man to sign over his New Orleans home to her. According to the Times-Picayune, Galjour invented a story about a fictitious group of malevolent neighbors, who were plotting to have the victim committed to a mental institution. The paralegal led the man to believe the only way to salvage his property was to put the property in her name.
Prosecutors say Galjour spent the man’s money on lavish parties, clothing, and even purchased a Jaguar in the man’s name.
Dudas said there is also litigation in the works to retrieve his parents’ home.
Slager's sentence is one of the longest given for an on-duty shooting in recent years. Slager pleaded guilty to a federal civil rights charge in 2017 for shooting Walter Scott in the back five times on April 4, 2015.
In court papers in Slager's appeal, Norton said he was discussing Slager's state trial on murder charges which had already taken place and ended in a mistrial. Slager said he first heard about the prosecution's plea deal when Savage visited him in the federal prison in Colorado where he is serving his sentence.
Former North Charleston police officer Michael Slager is requesting a new sentence in federal court this week, saying he would have taken the deal and that his lawyer was grossly incompetent for not telling him about it.
Andy Savage is one of South Carolina's most accomplished attorneys and at the time was also representing a Black church member whose life was spared in a racist massacre that killed nine people in a Charleston church in 2015, two months after Slager’s arrest.
BOZEMAN (AP) A Florida man who posed as a physician, called women on the telephone and talked them into mutilating themselves received a 20-year prison sentence in District Court.
Salvagni noted Sherer has a criminal history of similar offenses dating back to 1980 and was jailed for a few months. Prior incarceration for short periods of time did nothing to modify his conduct, the judge said. Sherer may not leave prison until he completes a program for sex offenders, Salvagni said.