04/28/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 04/28/2026 15:54
NEW ORLEANS, LOUISIANA - ALBERT PAUL WEBER ("WEBER"), age 42, of Harvey, Louisiana, and CYNTRELLE LASH ("LASH"), age 39, of New Orleans, were indicted on April 24, 2026, for their roles in a scheme to impersonate professional athletes and take out loans in their names, announced U.S. Attorney David I. Courcelle.
As alleged in court documents, WEBER, LASH, and their coconspirators impersonated athletes who were on the cusp of being drafted by NBA and NFL teams and paid multimillion dollar contracts. At least as early as 2016, WEBER and LASH stole the identities of the athletes, their family members, and others to defraud businesspeople and lenders who believed they were dealing with the athletes themselves. In total, over the course of several years, WEBER and LASH defrauded these victims into transferring over $3.5 million to WEBER, LASH, and their coconspirators, which they then laundered through multiple bank accounts. In May of 2025, the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office arrested WEBER and LASH for one instance of this scheme in which WEBER and LASH were caught using fake identification to sign notarized documents for loans for an athlete. After they were released on bond, WEBER began a new part of the scheme to defraud athletes involving trips overseas for basketball players. When WEBER's victims confronted him about defrauding them by keeping money he took for trips that never happened, WEBER threatened the victims, demanded more money, and warned them against talking to others about his scheme.
WEBER and LASH were charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and conspiracy to commit money laundering. WEBER is charged with six counts of aggravated identity theft, and LASH is charged with WEBER in one of those counts. WEBER was also charged with interstate transmission of a threat.
For both the conspiracy to commit wire fraud and the conspiracy to commit money laundering, WEBER and LASH face up to 20 years of imprisonment. Each aggravated identity theft is punishable by two years in prison, consecutive to any sentence for other charges, followed by up to one year of supervised release. For the interstate transmission of a threat, WEBER faces up to five years in prison per count, followed by up to three years of supervised release. For each charge, WEBER and LASH also face a fine of up to $250,000, or $500,000 in the case of the money laundering charge, or twice the gross gain to the defendants or loss to any party, and a $100 mandatory special assessment fee per count.
U.S. Attorney Courcelle reiterated that an indictment is merely an allegation and that the defendant's guilt must be proven beyond a reasonable doubt.
This case was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. U.S. Attorney Courcelle thanked the Jefferson Parish Sheriff's Office for its assistance. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Nicholas Moses of the Public Integrity Unit and Christine Calogero of the General Crimes Unit are in charge of the prosecution.
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