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Press Release
ATLANTA - Yuly Cesar Perez-Sale is the last of 31 defendants to be sentenced in connection with four-related indictments alleging marriage fraud and other immigration offenses concerning fraudulent marriages between Cuban nationals and United States citizens, and undocumented aliens from the countries of Honduras, Mexico, Uruguay, Brazil, Peru, and Venezuela.
“These defendants attempted to thwart the immigration laws of the United States by operating and participating in a fraudulent marriage factory,” said U.S. Attorney Byung J. “BJay” Pak. “Some of the defendants abused the law that allowed them as Cuban nationals to remain legally in this country. Thanks to the diligence and multi-state investigation of Homeland Security Investigation special agents, these defendants have been successfully prosecuted and, where applicable, deported.”
“Marriage fraud undermines the integrity of this nation’s immigration system”, said acting Special Agent in Charge Robert Hammer, who oversees HSI operations in Georgia and Alabama. “This multi-year investigation, led by HSI Atlanta’s Document and Benefit Fraud Task Force, is a testament to the tenacity of the task force who worked for years to see through the house of lies these “couples” built through fraud and illegal payments.”
According to U.S. Attorney Pak, the charges and other information presented in court: In November 2013, U.S. States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) and Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) in Atlanta, Georgia, began investigating a marriage fraud scheme involving undocumented aliens entering into fraudulent marriages with Cuban nationals, and U.S. citizens, to illegally gain immigration status in the United States.
Beginning in February 2001, and continuing through December 2016, the primary organizers of the scheme, Carolina Chow, Betiluz Suarez, Teodoro Gonzalez-Bonora, Marzuella Hernandez, and Jorge Morales-Amador, recruited and paid Cuban nationals and U.S. citizens to marry the illegal aliens. The illegal aliens then agreed to pay either Chow, Suarez, Gonzalez-Bonora, Marzuella Hernandez, or Morales-Amador as much as $20,000 to find and arrange a marriage with a Cuban national or U.S. citizen.
Once the fraudulent marriage was arranged, these defendants scheduled meetings between the aliens and their purported spouses. During the meetings, the aliens were informed about the price for the marriage, the date of payment, and how to answer questions posed to them by immigration officials.
In the course of investigating this large-scale criminal operation, the lead HSI case agents traveled all over the U.S., locating targets of the investigation and developing evidence to support these prosecutions. In all, the four indictments returned by a grand jury resulted in guilty pleas by and convictions for the following defendants on the dates below:
Case I – United States v. Carolina Chow et. al. –
Case II – United States v. Jorge Morales-Amador et. al. –
Case III – United States v. Betiluz Suarez et. al. –
Case IV: United States v. Maruzella Hernandez et. al. –
Yuly Cesar Perez-Sale, 52, of Miami, Florida, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Eleanor L. Ross. Perez-Sale pleaded guilty on October 16, 2019, to the offenses of Conspiracy to Defraud the United States and Alien Harboring.
The U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations investigated these cases.
Assistant U.S. Attorneys Stephanie Gabay-Smith, Mary Webb, and Richard S. Moultrie, Jr., Chief of the Violent Crime & National Security Section, prosecuted the cases.
For further information please contact the U.S. Attorney’s Public Affairs Office at USAGAN.PressEmails@usdoj.gov or (404) 581-6016. The Internet address for the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Georgia is http://www.justice.gov/usao-ndga.