Navy Vets founder isn’t who he says
Lt. Cmdr. Bobby Thompson, who founded the U.S. Navy Veterans Association in Tampa in 2002, isn’t named Bobby Thompson after all, and now stands accused of stealing that name from an unsuspecting resident of Washington state.
What is the real name of the man who masqueraded as the director of a nationwide charity for a decade, and where is he now?
That’s what Ohio Attorney General Richard Cordray was asking Thursday, as he announced that a nationwide arrest warrant for identity theft had been issued for the man who called himself Thompson but is listed now as a fugitive named “John Doe.”
”Our investigators have determined that this individual stole the identity of someone else and used that as a centerpiece of an apparent scam that has continued for seven years and involved tens of millions of dollars,” said Cordray. “We don’t know who this individual is yet, but we do know that he is not Bobby Thompson.”
Cordray said his office found evidence of the identity theft when investigators reviewed the registration record signed by Bobby Thompson to rent a UPS mailbox in Cincinnati for the Navy Veterans group in 2003.
The date of birth and the Social Security number on the rental agreement belonged to a Bobby Thompson in Bellingham, Wash., a man Cordray said “has absolutely no connection to the U.S. Navy Veterans Association.”
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The Attorney General’s Office said it is circulating two pictures taken in Florida of the man who called himself “Commander Thompson” in hopes that someone will recognize him and turn him in. One photo is taken from a Florida ID card applied for in 2006. The other was snapped at a check presentation by the Navy Veterans to the Florida Sheriff’s Youth Ranch in 2008.
”We don’t know where this guy is,” said Ted Hart, a spokesman for Cordray. “But if he’s stopped, this warrant for his arrest will pop up.”
The man who called himself Commander Thompson disappeared in late June, according to his attorneys, amid several state and federal investigations into the Navy Veterans and its claim that it gave millions to veterans, active-duty personnel and their families.
In Ohio, Cordray ordered fundraising by the Navy Veterans stopped, obtained restraining orders to halt use of its mailboxes and got court orders freezing the charity’s bank accounts. Similar investigations are underway in Florida, New Mexico, Virginia, Oregon, Missouri, Hawaii and New Hampshire.
Last week, federal investigators from the IRS and the Department of Veterans Affairs armed with a search warrant seized a computer and records from the Tampa home of two associates of the man who called himself Commander Thompson. The associates, Blanca Contreras and her daughter, Nancy Contreras, signed as officers of the Navy Veterans in the last four months.
The state and federal investigations were sparked by a investigative series, Under the Radar, the St. Petersburg Times published in March. The newspaper tried to find the 85 officers listed on Navy Veterans’ tax returns, as well as some evidence of a claimed membership of 66,000 and beneficial gifts in the tens of millions of dollars.
The Times found just a single officer — the man who called himself Thompson. Forty-one Navy Veterans offices across the United States turned out to be mail drops. The membership consisted of a few helpers and some stand-ins recruited to pose for pictures on the Navy Veterans website.
The Times has calculated that since the IRS granted the group tax-exempt status in 2002, the Navy Veterans national and state chapters have reported income to the IRS totaling $99.6 million.
And the money, much of it collected from the public by telemarketers? It’s unclear what happened to all the cash, but Cordray says some went to politicians.
The Times found more than $200,000 in contributions listed in Bobby Thompson’s name to local and national politicians, ranging from $500 to Hillsborough County Commissioner Kevin White to $10,000 to Minnesota congresswoman Michele Bachmann to $55,500 to Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli.
After one interview with “Commander Thompson” last August, the Times tried to verify his Navy service but could find no record that he had been in the military.
The explanation the commander offered: he said he’d “taken the identity of another” so he could enlist at age 15.
Warrant online:
To see the warrant for “Bobby Thompson’s” arrest and to read about the investigations into the U.S. Navy Veterans Association, go to links.tampabay.com.