Sussex County resident indicted for extortion and theft in scheme targeting immigrants

Georgetown – At a press conference today in Georgetown, Attorney General Beau Biden announced that his office has secured a criminal indictment charging a Sussex County resident with Extortion and Theft against members of the State’s Hispanic community.

 

In 2010 Biden’s office began receiving reports of targeting of local immigrants by 47 year-old Greenwood resident Jose Oyola when consumers approached staff from the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Unit who attended the 2010 Hispanic Festival in Millsboro.  As the Consumer Protection Unit began investigating those reports, staff learned that Delaware State Police had initiated its own criminal investigation after receiving similar complaints.  The two agencies began working together and made contact with leaders in the Hispanic community to identify victims and facilitate interviews.  Over the next two years nearly two dozen victims were ultimately identified.

 

At the time of the investigation, Jose Oyola was a middle school teacher for the Woodbridge School District and served as a coordinator for the English as a Second Language program sponsored by Sussex Tech Adult Education.  In these capacities, Oyola had daily contact with a large number of immigrant families from central and western Sussex County.  Victims were commonly referred to Oyola by word of mouth or met him through his teaching position or through ESL classes held at Woodbridge Middle School and the Bridgeville Head Start office.

 

The indictment, secured from the Sussex County Grand Jury on Monday, June 10, alleges that Oyola targeted individuals from Delaware’s immigrant community by using his position and his standing in the community to secure large sums of monies for services that he promised but never provided, and then threatened to have the victims deported if they did not cooperate with him.  The investigation revealed that over a period of several years, dating back as early as 2004, Oyola solicited money from multiple victims under a series of false pretenses.

 

“Protecting children, seniors, and vulnerable residents is our highest calling as law enforcers,” Biden said.  “The charges contained in this indictment allege the targeting of some of our most vulnerable residents for pure personal profit.  It’s wrong.  It’s deeply troubling.  And I’m here today to make it clear that we’re using our laws to protect all Delawareans from exploitation and intimidation.”

 

Oyola’s solicitations took the form of several schemes.

 

  • He promised to secure legal residency and work visas for multiple victims for fees that ranged from $1,500 to $3,000.  No work visas or residency forms were ever produced.  In fact, because many of his victims were undocumented immigrants, they were not entitled to obtain work visas or legal residency under federal law.
  • He told multiple victims who sought to enroll in ESL classes that they first needed to pay him personally to prepare tax returns and/or to secure a federal identification number in order to be eligible for the program.  Hundreds of dollars were typically charged for each tax return, and in some cases, Oyola collected additional money from consumers allegedly owed in back taxes.  In at least one case, Oyola reported that a tax refund paid to the consumer was a mistake and he directed the victim to turn the proceeds over to him.
  • In another scheme, Oyola allegedly collected a $1,500 fee to secure housing for a victim through Habitat for Humanity.  That housing was never provided.

Amounts paid by our victims to Oyola ranged from less than $100 to more than $5,000.  According to the investigation, when victims questioned or confronted Oyola about his tax preparation services or the status of their residency or visa applications, he threatened to have them deported if they did not make payment or if they filed a complaint with authorities.  He also removed several of the victims who confronted him from the ESL program.  Moreover, the investigation revealed that Oyola backed up this pattern of intimidation with action; after he allegedly found out that one victim had made a complaint, investigators learned that information about the victim’s immigration status was sent to her employer, causing her to be terminated from the position.

 

Delaware State Police arrested Oyola on April 18.  Monday’s indictment charges Oyola with six felony charges, including one count of Extortion and five counts of Theft.

 

Biden recognize Chief Special Investigator Jose Ortiz from the Attorney General’s Consumer Protection Division and Deputy Attorney General Kevin Carroll for their work on this case, and Lieutenant Marshall Craft from the Delaware State Police for leading the investigation.   He also thanked the leaders in the Sussex County Hispanic community for their invaluable support in reaching out to members of the community, building trust with victims that do not speak English, and for their hospitality in providing interview locations where victims felt secure and safe.

 

Biden called for members of the community who may have additional information to provide about this case to contact our Consumer Protection Unit at 1-800-220-5424 or Master Corporal George Camacho at the Delaware State Police at 302-856-5850 ext. 324.

The Delaware Department of Justice reminds the public that an indictment is merely an allegation and is not evidence of guilt. Defendants are presumed innocent and are entitled to a jury trial at which the state bears the burden of proving each charge beyond a reasonable doubt.

A booking image from Oyola’s April 18 arrest is attached.

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