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Two Iowa Men Sentenced to Federal Prison for Rebate Fraud

Two Iowa Men Sentenced to Federal Prison for Rebate Fraud

A Monticello man who forged the signatures of a Cedar Rapids utility company’s customers as part of a $300,000 light bulb rebate form fraud scheme was sentenced today to nearly two years in federal prison.

Anthony John Harms, age 35, from Marion, Iowa, received the prison term after a March 9, 2020 guilty plea to one count of mail fraud.

At prior hearings, evidence showed that Dustin Hutcheson operated Hutch Energy, LLC, which was an energy-related services business in Marion, Iowa.  Hutcheson recruited Harms into the light bulb scheme.  In 2017 and 2018, Hutcheson and Harms approached small business customers of a Cedar Rapids utility company and offered to replace their existing lighting with more energy efficient LED lighting for free.  They falsely claimed they could do so at no cost to the customer because of a rebate program that the utility company offered.  They claimed all the customer needed to do was provide Hutcheson the paperwork, which he would complete.  They told the customer to send Hutcheson the rebate check once the customer received it from the utility company.  Hutcheson then submitted fraudulent invoices to the utility company, making it appear as if the customer had paid for the lighting and was entitled to a rebate.  Hutcheson and Harms repeatedly forged the signatures of the utility company’s customers and Hutcheson inflated the number of bulbs installed on the rebate forms.  Harms also repeatedly called the utility company’s customer service line and impersonated the customers in order to learn the status of rebate forms.  In total, Hutcheson and Harms received over $300,000 in rebate moneys as a result of the fraud scheme.

Neither Hutcheson nor Harms was a licensed electrician.  As a result, they risked the safety of their customers and clientele.  In one case, Hutcheson’s light bulbs caused a fire in a nursing home, likely because the bulbs’ voltage was incorrect.  The nursing home had to evacuate 23 residents, including elderly individuals on feeding tubes and with dementia.

Harms was sentenced in Cedar Rapids by United States District Court Judge C.J. Williams.  He was ordered to make over $340,000 in restitution to the utility company, including paying the utility company’s attorney fees in responding to the government’s investigation and prosecution.  Harms must also serve a three-year term of supervised release after the prison term.  There is no parole in the federal system.  In June 2020, Hutcheson was sentenced to 44 months’ imprisonment for his leadership role in the scheme.

As a result of having been caught using narcotics on multiple occasions while on pretrial release, Harms is being held in the United States Marshal’s custody until he can be transported to a federal prison.

The case was prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Tim Vavricek and investigated by the Linn County Sheriff’s Office and the United States Postal Inspection Service.

Court file information at https://ecf.iand.uscourts.gov/cgi-bin/login.pl.

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