![]() (PHOTO: Delaware County District Attorney Jack Stollsteimer) police said, “It appears the house was just randomly picked.Mugshot of Jakyi Hooks of Folcroft, Pennsylvania. Police said they interviewed the residents of the Folcroft house. The investigation into the scam continues, police said. Fernandez-Suero also admitted to being the woman who stopped the UPS driver the day before. Police stopped the Jeep and seeing in plain view on the front passenger’s side floor was the same UPS package that was mailed to “Rob Marshal” on Glen Avenue.įernandez-Suero told police she was contacted by “Miguel Angel,” who wanted her to take the package home and someone would come by to get it and she would earn $100.įernandez-Suero said she had done the same two weeks earlier for Angel and received $100. She got back in the Jeep and drove away but didn’t get far. Around 7:15 a.m., UPS delivered the package addressed to a Rob Marshal, leaving it on a front step.Ībout an hour later, a white Jeep pulled up and a woman got out, walked up to the house and retrieved the package. ![]() UPS was able to reschedule the delivery for Thursday by 8 a.m.įolcroft police along with the Delaware County District Attorney’s Office Criminal Division set up surveillance at the home on the 1500 block of Glen Avenue. UPS contacted the driver and the delivery was not made.Ī short time later, a Latino woman in a white Jeep stopped the UPS driver in the area of Chester Pike and Route 420 and asked if the driver had a package for Rob Marshal on Glen Avenue in Folcroft. Officers contacted UPS and asked that the package not be delivered as scheduled. ![]() The victim provided the UPS tracking number to “Sarah Williams.” It was about this point that police got involved. The victim again went to a bank and withdrew $10,800, this time overnighting the money via UPS to “Rob Marshal” in Folcroft. The grandfather in Riverside would need to withdraw an additional $10,800 in cash and mail it to a “Rob Marshal” who resides on Glen Avenue in Folcroft. Later that day, the criminals went back to the well: “Sarah Williams” again called and stated that the bail had increased because the accident victim lost a child. “Sarah Williams” then arranged for a courier to go to the victim’s home and retrieve the cash for bail. In response to that call, the victim went to the bank and retrieved cash to bail out his grandson. ![]() Daniel White gave this account:įolcroft police were contacted March 28 by an officer in Riverside advising them a borough home was going to be used as a drop site for a fraud/scam case in which a resident of Riverside was the victim.Ī women then got on the phone and identified herself as “Sarah Williams” from the San Diego Public Defenders Office and advised the victim that due to the injuries from the vehicle accident bail for “Andrew” would be $8,000 in cash. Gallard and released on $5,000 unsecured bail pending a preliminary hearing April 18.Īn affidavit of probable cause written by Folcroft Cpl. Lourdes Fernandez-Suero (COURTESY OF DELAWARE COUNTY)įernandez-Suero was charged with theft, receiving stolen property, criminal use of a communication facility and was arraigned by District Judge Elizabeth S. Lourdes Fernandez-Suero, 42, told police she was employed by “Miguel Angel,” who asked her to take the money to her residence and someone would come by to pick it up, and she would get $100 for the trouble.īut police got wise to scheme, which was being perpetrated on a man in Riverside, California, and Fernandez-Suero didn’t get much farther than the doorstep with the money. A Philadelphia woman was arrested on charges involving her role as mule in a “grandparents scheme” involving $10,000 left on a doorstep in Folcroft.
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