Bremerton Bank Fraud Duo Admit To Nearly $229K Ripoff

A Bremerton woman at the center of a long-running bank fraud case has formally admitted her role in the scheme, bringing a yearslong investigation into its final stretch.

Emily Vranic, 34, pleaded guilty Thursday in U.S. District Court in Tacoma to conspiracy to commit bank fraud and aggravated identity theft in a case prosecutors say siphoned nearly $229,000 from banks and customers. Her co-defendant, 37-year-old Heather Marquis, pleaded guilty last month. U.S. District Judge Tiffany M. Cartwright has set sentencing for Sept. 3, 2026.

How the Scheme Worked

According to prosecutors, between April 2019 and November 2024 the two women ran a mail-based fraud operation that targeted victims’ financial identities. They are accused of stealing victims’ mail and using documents inside to activate credit cards, open lines of credit and take over online bank accounts.

Investigators say the pair arranged for statements and other financial records to be routed through third-party addresses, giving them a chance to intercept the mail before it reached the intended recipients. From there, they allegedly funneled the correspondence to a Bremerton address, which prosecutors say allowed them to quietly rack up debt and move money without victims catching on, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, Western District of Washington.

Money Moved and Restitution

All told, prosecutors say the scheme drained nearly $229,000 from banks and customer accounts. In one example cited by authorities, the pair allegedly transferred nearly $33,000 from a vulnerable victim’s account and then tried to move another $35,000 before a bank blocked the second transfer…

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