Identity thief whose deception led to his victim’s incarceration gets a
12-year prison term
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[February 01, 2025]
By HEATHER HOLLINGSWORTH
An information technology expert who for decades assumed the identity of
another man so convincingly that his victim was forcibly medicated and
jailed for identity theft himself was sentenced Friday to 12 years in
prison.
Matthew David Keirans, 59, of Hartland, Wisconsin, pleaded guilty last
April to federal charges of aggravated identify theft and making false
statements to a National Credit Union Administration insured
institution.
The charges shocked Keirans’ family and friends, who described him in
letters to the court as kind, gracious and dependable. His victim,
William Woods, said Keirans' guilty plea spelled the end of a yearslong
nightmare.
Woods said Keirans tried to make him look like the criminal.
“He deserved to get every bit of what he got from the judge,” Woods said
after the sentencing.
Court records indicate Keirans had a rocky childhood, ran away from home
at 16, stole a car in San Francisco and was arrested in Oregon but never
appeared in court.
The two men met in the late 1980s while working at a hot dog cart in
Albuquerque, New Mexico, court records show.
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Woods said Keirans stole his wallet in 1988, but returned it after Woods
threatened to punch him.
But while Keirans had possession of Woods' wallet, he used the
information on Woods' social security card to apply for a driver's
license as William Woods.
At that point, "he’s got my name with his face on an ID card,” Woods
told The Associated Press.
There is no record of Keirans using his real name or social security
number after 1988. Court documents show he publicly assumed the name
William Woods in 1990.
Over the years, Keirans married and had a child, all as Woods. He worked
at the University of Iowa Hospital and used Woods’ ID to secure credit
union loans in Iowa totaling more than $200,000, prosecutors said.
Woods, meanwhile, wasn't earning enough to file taxes — around $3,000 a
year at the time, but he wasn't completely under the radar. In 2015,
Yousef Saleh Erakat, a YouTuber known as FouseyTube, found Woods living
on the street and created a series of videos with more than 1 million
views each that document Erakat giving Woods food and paying for him to
stay in a motel.
Woods used money Fousey gave him to pay for a credit-monitoring service,
and learned that someone was racking up debt and opening accounts under
his name. Outraged, Woods marched into a Los Angeles bank in 2019 and
demanded an end to it.
“The guy is fraudulent,” Woods recalled saying.
The branch manager asked Woods a series of security questions that he
was unable to answer because the answers had been set by Keirans. Then
the bank called the police, court records say. Keirans, whom the bank
believed was Woods, told police that no one in California had permission
to access his accounts.
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In this combination image, undated selfie shows William Woods
in Albequergue, N.M., left, and this undated photo released by the
Johnson County Sheriff's Office shows Matthew David Keirans.
(William Woods and Johnson County Sheriff's Office via AP, File)
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“Suspect entered bank and attempted to use victim’s personal
identification to gain access to victim’s bank account,” the arrest
report said.
The real Woods was then charged with identity theft and false
impersonation.
Keirans' attorney argued in a court filing that Woods tried to steal
thousands of dollars from his client, and described Woods as a
“wrongdoer whose own conduct should mitigate any sympathy felt for
him.”
Woods is identified in court records from that time as Matthew
Kierans, misspelling his tormentor’s name. There's no record of how
or why authorities came to identify him as such.
Woods told police the names of his relatives, and even offered to
call the owner of the hot dog cart to prove his identity.
“They wouldn’t let me,” Woods said. He said the YouTube videos also
proved his identity.
As Woods repeatedly disputed the identity authorities foisted upon
him, a California judge found him not mentally competent to stand
trial and sent him to a state mental hospital, where he received
psychotropic medication, court records show.
Woods spent 428 days in county jail and 147 days in the mental
hospital. He was released after agreeing to a no-contest plea — a
case that has since been vacated. The Los Angeles County Alternate
Public Defender’s Office declined to comment.
Freed, Woods began a crusade to regain his identity, filing a string
of reports. When he reached out to the University of Iowa Hospital,
where Keirans was earning more than $100,000 a year, hospital
security called the police.
Keirans initially told police that the victim “needed help and
should be locked up,” federal prosecutors said. But a detective
tracked down the biological father listed on Woods’ birth
certificate and tested his DNA to confirm that Woods was his son.
“My life is over," Keirans said, when confronted with the results.
Woods is now back living in Albuquerque where he works as a
landscaper. He said he plans to seek compensation for his wrongful
incarceration.
“My main goal," he said, “is to rebuild my life.”
___
Associated Press researcher Jennifer Farrar in New York contributed
to this report.
All contents © copyright 2025 Associated Press. All rights reserved
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