A Nicaraguan citizen was brought to Miami from Spain this week on federal charges tied to the man’s alleged wire fraud and money-laundering operation.
As part of the joint investigation by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corp.’s Office of Inspector General and the U.S. Secret Service, prosecutors allege the man drained more than $29 million from U.S. bank accounts.
Ernesto Ortega Padgett is facing a 27-count indictment for allegedly leading a network that posed as bank officials to trick victims into handing over sensitive information, then moved stolen funds through shell accounts and cash withdrawals, often converting them into cryptocurrency, according to a
“Ortega and his co-conspirators posed as bank representatives and used a combination of technology and social engineering to deceive victims into providing sensitive account information … then used that information to access victims’ bank accounts and initiate unauthorized wire transfers,” the OIG release stated. “Ortega relied on an international network of money launderers to receive the stolen funds, withdraw them in cash, and forward the proceeds to accounts directly under Ortega’s control, often in the form of cryptocurrency.”
The indictment details that — as part of the scheme that ran from 2020 onward — Ortega and his co-conspirators used extortion and threatened force to compel some money launderers to take part in the scheme.
Ortega was wanted in the U.S., Spain and Panama and was captured in Paris late last year. He now faces felony counts tied to wire fraud, extortion and handling criminal proceeds.
The federal government under the Trump administration has taken a number of steps to reduce fraud. The FDIC
A new request for information will take information for 90 days related to cross-government collaboration on fraud prevention, educational programming and information sharing. The Federal Reserve, FDIC and Office of the Comptroller of the Currency also
The Treasury in May
President Donald Trump’s
Banks plan to ramp up tech spending in 2025, according to American Banker research. Meanwhile, fraud rings
While technology has broadened the kinds of scams launched against U.S. consumers, the research indicates even classic scams — like fake sweepstakes checks asking victims to wire money back — are on the rise, often leaving the customer legally responsible.