Danish Syed is 19 years old.
AB Wire
WASHINGTON, DC: A Pakistani American man, Danish Syed, 19, of Smithfield, Virginia, pleaded guilty on February 24 to Conspiracy to Commit Money Laundering and Harboring a Fugitive.
Syed was indicted by a federal grand jury on December 24, 2014. Syed faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison for conspiracy to commit money laundering and 10 years in prison for harboring a fugitive, according to the Justice Department.
According to the statement of facts filed with his plea agreement, Danish Syed is the half-brother of Mehdi Syed, who was charged, in March, 2014, with an account take over and identity theft scheme.
As alleged in the indictment, Mehdi, under the guise of a legitimate company sought to obtain thousands of dollars from customers of SunTrust Bank by fraudulently transferring funds from individual accounts to nominee checking accounts established by Mehdi in the names of aliases and purported business entities.
In April, 2014, Mehdi was located in North Carolina and agreed to surrender to authorities. Mehdi relocated his family from North Carolina to Smithfield, Virginia; the home of his mother, his step-father and his half-brother, Danish. After Mehdi failed to turn himself in, authorities interviewed his family members and they each claimed they did not know his whereabouts.
The next day Mehdi’s mother, “NS,” contacted authorities and admitted they had lied to the FBI and that they did know Mehdi’s location as Danish Syed drove Mehdi to a hotel on the Eastern Shore of Virginia. Mehdi was arrested and on May 28, 2014 was released on bond and electronic monitoring. In June, 2014, Mehdi opened several bank accounts with FirstView in the names of aliases. On July 9, 2014 Mehdi’s electronic monitoring bracelet was located in a wooded area off of Mercury Blvd. in Hampton, Virginia, and on the same day a warrant was issued for his arrest.
One of the customers whose account was fraudulently accessed was “DS.” Beginning in August, 2014 Mehdi caused “DS’s” account to be accessed without his permission. Through third party payroll services thousands of dollars were transferred out of “DS’s” account and into the FirstView accounts Mehdi had created while on pre-trial release.
FirstView closed several of the accounts they suspected were opened on suspicion of fraud and the funds were mailed to the address on record; Danish Syed’s home in Smithfield. Thereafter Danish Syed communicated with Mehdi Syed about the funds. On or about October 14, 2014 through October 16, 2014, Danish Syed deposited the FirstView checks, which represented fraudulent funds, into an account accessible by Mehdi. From October 15, 2014 through October 30, 2014 Mehdi withdrew nearly all of the funds that Danish had deposited into the account from ATM machines located in Lahore, Pakistan.