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They took vacations together to Japan, Panama and Brazil, and Johnson hosted a "Meet Mitch" party to introduce him to her friends. She even turned her son's bedroom into an office so he could move in, the complaint said. But after he got the money -- about $2.95 million -- he started making excuses to avoid spending time with her, and delayed moving in together, the lawsuit said. The relationship ended in March 2008, when she discovered the account she was pumping money into was set up under Gross' name. The court issued a settlement order in June 2008 that ordered Gross to pay Johnson more than $3.2 million
-- a sum that is now about $4 million with interest, said her lawyers, who applauded the criminal investigation. "I'm not surprised to see the federal charges," said the woman's attorney, Clay O'Daniel. "I figured it was a matter of time." Her other counsel, Richard Garbarini, said his client is "ecstatic that justice is being done." Prosecutors, meanwhile, said anyone else who believes they were victimized should contact authorities. U.S. Attorney Sally Quillian Yates warned that the Internet makes it simpler "for those bent on defrauding others to find their next victim." Gross, who lives in metro Atlanta, has written six books under the Mitchell Graham pen name, including a three-part science fiction series and a legal thriller called "Dead Docket." Court records also say he wrote another book, the suspense thriller "Circle of Lies," under the pen name Douglas Alan.
[Associated
Press;
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