New York prosecutors charge pair with selling fake COVID-19 vaccine cards
Two women have been charged with selling forged COVID-19 vaccination cards through an Instagram account and to enter the names of customers into New York state’s immunization database, prosecutors said on Tuesday.
Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr. charged Jasmine Clifford, 31 of Lyndhurst, New Jersey, and Nadayza Barkley, 27, of Bellport, New York, with offering a false instrument, which is a felony, and misdemeanor conspiracy.
Barkley’s lawyer Glenn Hardy said his client maintains her innocence and believes she will be vindicated after a full investigation. An attorney for Clifford was not immediately available for comment.
Vance also charged 13 hospital, nursing home and medical and nursing school workers with possession of a forged instrument, accusing them of purchasing cards from Clifford. Barkley is accused of entering some of their names in the database.
Demand for counterfeit COVID-19 vaccination cards has increased in recent months as more state and local governments, schools and businesses require employees and students to get vaccinated against the coronavirus. Vaccines are widely available and free of charge in the United States, where the inoculation rate lags other developed countries as millions choose not to be vaccinated.
Vance said social media companies such as Facebook, which owns Instagram, needs to prevent fraud on their websites.
“The stakes are too high to tackle fake vaccination cards with whack-a-mole prosecutions,” he said. “Making, selling, and purchasing forged vaccination cards are serious crimes with serious public safety consequences.”
Vance said Clifford, a self-described entrepreneur with several online businesses, began advertising fake COVID-19 vaccination cards on her Instagram account, @AntiVaxMomma, in May. She sold about 250 cards for $200 a piece on the social media site, Vance said.
For an additional $250 fee, Barkley, who works at a medical clinic in New York, would enter the buyer’s name into the state’s database as having received COVID-19 vaccinations. She fraudulently entered at least 10 names, he said.
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