本老中报告一件好人好事。给University of Otago发信



所有跟贴·加跟贴·新语丝读书论坛http://www.xys.org/cgi-bin/mainpage.pl

送交者: 老中一号 于 2006-2-23, 22:15:35:

http://www.business.otago.ac.nz/finc/staff/index.html

两个月前,给这个部门及学校行政部发信,把以下这篇东西以及本老中调查好的记者联络方法给学校寄出了。这个部门前几天回信给我说已经处理好了,到网上一看,苏东蔚已经被除名。这种人渣还是留给暨南大学自己享用比较好,本老中只有兴趣给中土国以外的净土把关,所以中土国国境以内的本老中就不折腾了。

Published Wednesday, June 20, 2001, in the Akron Beacon Journal.

Ex-UA professor gets jail sentence

Native of China given maximum 16-month term for identity theft

BY KATIE BYARD

Beacon Journal staff writer

CLEVELAND: At the University of Akron, he taught economics.

Outside the classroom, professor Dongwei Su practiced a criminal xxxx of supply and demand. When his demand for goods outstripped his supply of money, he stole the identities of others, got credit cards in their names and racked up credit card bills of more than $100,000 to finance a lavish lifestyle.

Yesterday, U.S. District Judge Patricia Anne Gaughan told the 30-year-old native of China that his actions were ``particularly deplorable, given all the advantages you have had in this country. Sentencing Su to the maximum 16 months in federal prison, Gaughan told the xxxxer UA professor that she agreed with federal attorneys who said that he was motivated by ``pure, unadulterated greed.

Su will serve the next 11 months in prison because he was given credit for the five months of jail time he has served following his indictment earlier this year. In January, a federal grand jury returned a 14-count indictment against Su. He was arrested and detained without bond.

In late April, Su pleaded guilty to mail fraud and credit card related charges . Su admitted using the identity inxxxxation of five people including people he had met while studying at Ohio State University to obtain credit cards. Federal prosecutors have said Su used credit cards to buy plane tickets , furniture and other items.

Su, a Chinese citizen, now faces deportation to his homeland.

Wearing navy blue prison garb and unshackled from handcuffs that he wore when he was escorted into court, Su told the judge: ``I feel very sorry for the crime that I have committed. I feel very sorry.

Defense attorney Michael Lear argued in the Cleveland courtroom for a lesser sentence. He pointed out that once Su finishes serving this sentence, he will be detained by the Immigration and Naturalization Service until a deportation hearing can be scheduled. Lear also asked the judge to consider Su s youth. Lear said Su was in his early 20s when he began stealing identities.

``He essentially stopped in 1999, Lear said.

Lear said Su has ``accepted responsibility for his actions and has ``agreed that greed led him to these actions. . . . Greed got to him and consumed him.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Steven Jackson, however, told the judge Su began to express remorse for his actions only ``after he was caught. Jackson said after the sentencing that Su s credit ``had been ruined, or at least was not good, by the early 1990s. So Su started using other people s names and Social Security numbers. ``He knew the ramifications of what bad credit does to you, Jackson said. `` Instead of paying on it, or taking care of it himself, he went and stole other people s identities.

Su did manage to gradually pay off nearly two-thirds of the $114,241.74 he racked up in debt using the credit cards he fraudulently obtained. He still owes $40,544 and Judge Gaughan ordered him to pay that amount in restitution. She said that after he serves his time in prison, he must make monthly payments on that debt.

Postal inspectors began investigating Su s use of credit cards last year, when a xxxxer graduate student from Ohio State said credit companies began pestering him about more than $39,000 in purchases in the Columbus and Akron areas. The student said he had not made the purchases and helped lead authorities to Su.

Su also used the identities of two other people he met while studying at Ohio State University, federal prosecutors have said. Su continued his credit card scam after he moved to Northeast Ohio in 1997 to begin work as an assistant professor of economics at UA, prosecutors have said.

They said that after buying a house in Green in 1998, Su received a credit card solicitation for a person who had earlier lived at the address. Su used the card to buy more than $10,000 in items, prosecutors said. Su also used identity inxxxxation of a neighbor in Green to obtain another card. At UA, Su was making about $50,000 a year. He resigned in May after being placed on administrative leave without pay.

Lear, Su s attorney, said yesterday that Su recently was hired as an assistant professor of economics at Morgan State University in Baltimore. Obviously, Su will not be able to take the job, Lear said.




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