Boomers are totally fleecing people for massive stacks while acting innocent in court. Virginia Maida allegedly scammed the Mash Family Futures Trust out of nearly one hundred forty thousand American dollars. Magistrate Donald Ndirowei released the sixty-two-year-old on one thousand bucks bail after she appeared for tricking victims with a house in Marlborough.
Prosecutors claim she pretended to manage her deceased brother's estate last July. She flashed papers saying she could offload the residence for one hundred twenty grand. The buyers dropped the full amount in hard currency, believing her story. It turned out she lacked permission from the Master of the High Court to trade the asset.
Real heirs threw a fit and sued, causing a judge to cancel the deal in November. Maida apparently kept quiet about the family drama and supplied fake home addresses to dodge heat. The purchasers finally realized the deception in December before cops collared her on January eleventh.
Not a single penny has been retrieved from the total loss. The trust is basically holding an empty bag while the legal system tries to sort out the mess.
Prosecutors claim she pretended to manage her deceased brother's estate last July. She flashed papers saying she could offload the residence for one hundred twenty grand. The buyers dropped the full amount in hard currency, believing her story. It turned out she lacked permission from the Master of the High Court to trade the asset.
Real heirs threw a fit and sued, causing a judge to cancel the deal in November. Maida apparently kept quiet about the family drama and supplied fake home addresses to dodge heat. The purchasers finally realized the deception in December before cops collared her on January eleventh.
Not a single penny has been retrieved from the total loss. The trust is basically holding an empty bag while the legal system tries to sort out the mess.