Man Sentenced for Operating Credit Card Forgery Lab Used for Tobacco Trafficking

From: U.S. Attorney’s Office/Eastern District of Virginia

Man Sentenced for Operating Credit Card Forgery Lab

NEWPORT NEWS, Va. – Eric Charles Murray, 32, of Hampton, was sentenced today to 88 months in prison for his role in establishing and operating a high-tech credit card forgery lab in his home in 2016. Murray was also sentenced to five years of supervised release, which includes computer monitoring software on any computers Murray may have.

Murray pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank, mail, and wire fraud; aggravated identity theft; and possessing a firearm as a convicted felon, on Nov. 15, 2016. According to court documents, Murray established a credit card forgery lab in his home in April 2016. Over a two-month period, he used Bitcoin currency to purchase stolen credit card information on the dark web, targeting information that belonged to Virginia residents. He and his conspirators then used the credit card forgery lab to place the stolen information on counterfeited credit and debit cards, which they had re-embossed in their own names and the names of others. Murray and his conspirators used these counterfeit cards to conduct unauthorized purchases of high-end electronics and cigarettes, which they then resold for cash in Hampton Roads and New York state. . . .

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