SoCal Sham Marriage Ring Charged Thousands To Match US Citizens With Chinese In Need Of Green Cards

LOS ANGELES (CBS/AP) -- A Southern California man, his daughter and an associate were charged Wednesday with running an elaborate sham marriage ring that secured green cards for Chinese citizens by wedding them to Americans, authorities said.

Jason Shiao, 65, and his daughter Lynn Leung, 43, were arrested on charges of conspiring to commit visa fraud for allegedly arranging the phony marriages and charging Chinese citizens as much as $50,000 to get their legal residency, Immigration and Customs Enforcement said.

Authorities said they were still searching for 48-year-old Shannon Mendoza, who is accused of recruiting American spouses in dire need of cash for the schemes.

Shiao posed as a lawyer, authorities said. He and Leung ran a Pasadena-based business that paired up couples and snapped photos of them together in bridal gear and on purported honeymoon trips to make their marriages seem legitimate to immigration officers reviewing their green card applications, authorities said.

In 2009, San Francisco sham marriage broker Kwan Tsoi, aka Joyce Cai was sentenced to 9 months in prison for arranging fake marriages for foreign nationals. Tsoi advertised in Chinese-language newspapers and charged as much as $30,000 for her services according to court documents. She was prosecuted after a joint investigation by ICE and the Diplomatic Security Service (DSS).

Since October 2006, more than 70 fraudulent immigration petitions were filed, netting the Pasadena business $3.5 million, said Claude Arnold, special agent in charge of ICE's homeland security investigations in Los Angeles.

Arnold said marriage fraud has been rampant for more than two decades but is frequently downplayed on television and in movies such as "Green Card."

"It is glamorized in Hollywood movies as you are helping someone out," Arnold said. "The people who are facilitating this -- they're not in it to help someone out. They're not a charitable organization. They're just trying to line their pockets."

It was not immediately possible to reach the defendants or locate a working phone number for Shiao and Leung's business, which authorities said also advertised in Chinese-language newspapers in California. The pair were due to appear in federal court in Los Angeles later Wednesday.

In court filings, federal investigators said in one instance a gay American man who had a boyfriend was recruited to marry a Chinese woman, who already had a husband. The American man was promised $18,000 and was sent on a paid trip to Las Vegas, where he posed for photos with his arranged wife, officials said.

Later, during an interview with an immigration officer, the American acknowledged he was gay, according to court papers.

If convicted, Shiao and Leung could lose their green cards and face deportation proceedings. Both are citizens of China and Australia, authorities said.

Immigration officials said they learned of the scheme after an anonymous caller contacted a toll-free tip line.

TM and © Copyright 2015 CBS Radio Inc. and its relevant subsidiaries. CBS RADIO and EYE Logo TM and Copyright 2015 CBS Broadcasting Inc. Used under license. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten. The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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