Columbus Man Pleads Guilty in Multimillion-Dollar Pandemic Relief Fraud, Faces 30 Years

The conclusion of a major pandemic fraud case sees the final defendant, 26-year-old Christopher Upshaw of Columbus, admitting guilt in a scheme that siphoned off an estimated $17 million intended for pandemic relief, as per an announcement by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Georgia. Upshaw, who went by the alias “Troub,” is facing a sentence of up to 30 years in prison after pleading guilty to one count of mail fraud.

His co-defendants, who had previously entered guilty pleas for the same charge and are awaiting sentencing, include Johnathon Swift, Dontavis Williams, and Donterious Sparks, all based in Columbus, as the scheme involved elaborate fabrications to unjustly claim COVID-related tax credits through LLCs, with funds used for opulent purchases like luxury vehicles, all while legitimate businesses grappled with the fallout of the pandemic and the need for genuine financial support. The fraud was brought to light through a coordinated effort involving the FBI and IRS, with U.S. District Judge Clay Land presiding over the court proceedings, announced U.S. Attorney William R. “Will” Keyes.

Law enforcement officials emphasized the seriousness of the fraud, noting its impact on taxpayers and how funds meant to help businesses and workers during the pandemic were deliberately misused. The defendants cashed 16 checks totaling more than $1.2 million from false tax returns and filed over 150 fraudulent Form 941 returns to claim COVID tax credits. Authorities said the scheme caused an attempted and actual loss of about $17.5 million to federal taxpayers…

Story continues

TRENDING NOW

LATEST LOCAL NEWS