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Press Release

Indiana Man Sentenced To Federal Prison In Black Money Scam

For Immediate Release
U.S. Attorney's Office, District of Rhode Island





PROVIDENCE, R.I. – Alvin Pennue, 32, of Indianapolis, Ind., was sentenced today to 21 months in federal prison for passing altered United States currency on two occasions and for inducing a victim to transport $5,000 from Massachusetts to Rhode Island as part of a Black Money scam, announced United States Attorney Peter F. Neronha and Brian S. Deck, Acting Resident Agent in Charge of the Providence Office of the United States Secret Service.

At sentencing, Pennue was also ordered by U.S. District Court Judge John J. McConnell, Jr. to serve three years of supervised release following his prison term and make restitution in the amount of $5,000 to one of his victims. Pennue was convicted by a federal court jury in Providence on June 19, 2013, of two counts of passing altered obligations of the United States and one count of interstate transportation of stolen property - inducing a victim to transport U.S. currency in interstate commerce as part of a scheme to defraud.

Black Money scams are schemes to defraud whereby individuals attempt to obtain money from a victim by persuading that person that large quantities of banknote-sized paper are really U.S. currency that has been dyed black, typically to avoid detection by customs agents. The victim is persuaded, with the prospect of sharing in the proceeds, to supply real currency to purchase supplies and otherwise facilitate a chemical transformation that will remove the black dye covering the supposedly genuine currency. In reality, except for a few genuine currency bills used to advance the scheme, the black money is usually black construction paper.

At trial, the government presented evidence that during October 2011, Alvin Pennue, through another person, passed to an undercover U.S. Secret Service agent two blackened $100 bills and two blackened $20 bills to a victim of the scam. Pennue persuaded the victim to withdraw $5,000 in $100 bills from his bank account in Massachusetts and to bring that money to Providence to invest in the black money scam. 

The evidence showed that at the time of his arrest on October 28, 2011, Alvin Pennue and a second person were in possession of a suitcase containing supplies used to facilitate a black money scam. Pennue was also in possession of over $2,700, including twenty-three $100 bills.

Arrests warrants have been issued for two co-defendants in this matter, Saah Johnson, 36, of Fall River, Mass., and Anthony Chadheen, 35, of Providence.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard W. Rose and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Benjamin S. Towbin.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Providence Police Department, and the Rhode Island State Fire Marshal’s Office assisted the U.S. Secret Service in the investigation of this matter.


To assist the media and the public, a glossary of federal judicial terms and procedures is available at http://www.justice.gov/usao/justice101/

Contact: 401-709-5357
USARI.Media@usdoj.gov

Updated June 22, 2015