A Castle Rock resident who once fell for an online romance scam is now headed to federal prison for helping keep that same fraud machine running. Prosecutors say Lori Ann Kimball moved nearly $3.5 million in scam proceeds, turning from victim to key money handler in an international operation. A federal judge also ordered her to pay about $3.1 million in restitution to those who were duped.
Indictment and allegations
A federal grand jury returned a superseding indictment charging Kimball with one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering and 23 counts of money laundering. The filing alleged she cycled millions of dollars through traditional banks and cryptocurrency accounts, then pushed more than $3.4 million to overseas operators between January 2023 and February 2025, according to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Colorado.
Sentence and restitution
On March 20, a federal judge sentenced Kimball to one year and one day in prison on the conspiracy count. The court ordered her to repay $3,112,990 to victims and gave her 15 days to self-surrender to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons. Court documents indicate she is expected to serve her sentence at a facility in Phoenix, as reported by CBS News.
How prosecutors say the scheme worked
Federal officials say Kimball’s case was one piece of a larger “pig butchering” romance-scam setup, where fraudsters groom victims online, drain their finances and move on. According to the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Colorado, Kimball opened and used at least 20 bank accounts and at least nine cryptocurrency accounts.
Prosecutors say she shuffled money using cashier’s checks and carefully structured deposits, then pushed the funds into digital wallets controlled by associates overseas. In plain English, she became the middle step between people losing their savings and the scammers cashing out.
Warnings she ignored
According to case documents cited by prosecutors, Kimball first sent her own money after meeting someone calling himself “Joe Hart” on a dating app. Before long, that same digital wallet was receiving money traced to other victims.
Multiple people and institutions allegedly tried to stop the bleeding. A friend warned her that “Hart” was probably not real. Castle Rock police met with her twice, in late 2022 and again in early 2023, and cautioned her about potential criminal exposure. A cryptocurrency platform and a bank flagged suspicious transactions in December 2023, and one bank ultimately closed an account in September 2024…