Border Patrol agents confiscate counterfeit vaccine cards at checkpoints
across U.S.
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[October 14, 2021]
By Bethany Blankley
(The Center Square) – While much attention
has been focused on the fallout of increased illegal immigration and
crime at the southern border, Customs and Border Patrol agents also say
they are routinely finding packages shipped from China containing fake
COVID-19 vaccination cards.
CBP says its agents have seized more than 6,000 counterfeit COVID-19
vaccination cards in Chicago, Memphis, Anchorage and Pittsburgh in the
past few months.
At the International Mail Facility at Chicago O’Hare Airport, agents
last week seized two shipments of counterfeit COVID-19 vaccination cards
originating from China headed to Texas.
One package was manifested that it contained PVC sleeves; another was
labeled as containing greeting cards. The counterfeit cards closely
resembled Center for Disease Control certificates, the agents found, but
appeared to be fraudulent due to their low-quality appearance and other
discrepancies.
“Our CBP officers continue the fight against these crooks who are using
this pandemic to make a profit by selling these fraudulent documents,”
LaFonda Sutton-Burke, director of Field Operations in Chicago, said in a
statement.
This was the third time Chicago CBP has stopped shipments of counterfeit
COVID-19 vaccination cards in less than two months.
Last month, agents at the Port of Cincinnati confiscated their fifth
shipment of fake vaccine cards. Since August 16, Cincinnati agents have
seized 1,683 counterfeit COVID-19 vaccination cards and 2,034 fake
Pfizer inoculation stickers.
Although the vaccination cards displayed a CDC logo, CBP agents noticed
misspellings and substandard printing, clues that they were fake.
All of the shipments originated in China. They were imported by
non-medical entities in private residences and apartments located in
Illinois, Maryland, Missouri, New York and Texas, CBP states.
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“Creating or buying a fake COVID-19 vaccination card
is illegal, not to mention dangerous,” Cincinnati Port Director
Richard Gillespie said in a statement. “Purchasing counterfeit cards
supports criminals whose only concern is their bank account, not
American security or the health of our citizens. Our officers know
that counterfeiters will try to replicate anything to benefit
themselves, with no thought to the innocent victims that may suffer
from their actions. The men and women of CBP are trained and ready
to shut down these scammers and protect our country.”
CBP's border security mission at ports of entry is to “screen
international travelers and cargo and search for illicit narcotics,
unreported currency, weapons, counterfeit consumer goods, prohibited
agriculture, and other illicit products that could potentially harm
the American public, U.S. businesses,” and undermine national
security.
Part of this involves CBP’s Fraudulent Document Analysis Unit
working with U.S. Department of Homeland Security Investigations and
other federal agencies to interdict fraudulent documents and illicit
activity.
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office of Inspector
General also is warning Americans about COVID-related fraud.
“Be cautious of COVID-19 survey scams," it states. "Do not give your
personal, medical, or financial information to anyone claiming to
offer money or gifts in exchange for your participation in a
COVID-19 vaccine survey.”
It also says that photos of COVID-19 vaccination cards “should not
be shared on social media,” including personally identifiable
information that could be used for identity theft purposes.
“Beneficiaries should be cautious of unsolicited requests for their
personal, medical, and financial information,” it adds.
“Be aware of scammers pretending to be COVID-19 contact tracers,”
the warning states.
“Legitimate contact tracers will never ask for your Medicare number,
financial information, or attempt to set up a COVID-19 test for you
and collect payment information for the test.”
Suspected COVID-19-related fraud can be reported online or through a
tollfree number: 800-HHS-TIPS (800-447-8477). |