03/24/2026 | Press release | Distributed by Public on 03/24/2026 11:22
DENVER - The United States Attorney's Office for the District of Colorado announces that Lori Ann Kimball, 52, Castle Rock, was sentenced to one year and one day in federal prison and ordered to pay $3,112,990.13 in restitution after pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit money laundering.
According to the plea agreement, from January 2023 through at least February 2025, Kimball conspired with a person to move proceeds of mail and wire fraud to Nigeria. Conspirators other than Kimball engaged in what's known as a 'pig butchering scheme,' in which individuals use a fictitious identity to cold contact a victim, typically via a social media or dating application, where they build trust and then induce the victim to send money in the form of wire transfers, checks, or virtual currency. Kimball was initially a victim of the pig butchering scheme before she began laundering money received from other victims. After being warned by local law enforcement about the nature of her conduct, Kimball continued to carry out illegal financial transactions, including transferring over $3.4 million she received from victims to cryptocurrency accounts in her own name before eventually transferring those holdings to digital wallets being held by individuals primarily in Nigeria. Kimball also provided false information to banks and cryptocurrency exchanges to conceal and disguise her activity. During her involvement in this conspiracy, Kimball utilized at least 20 bank accounts and at least seven cryptocurrency accounts.
"Sadly, Ms. Kimball was herself a victim of this malicious scheme, but she then joined those who targeted her to help steal millions of dollars from others. She continued even after local law enforcement warned to stop her criminal behavior," said United States Attorney for the District of Colorado Peter McNeilly. "I urge all Coloradans to use caution when placing their trust in people they meet online, especially when those people ask for money."
"Romance scams leave deep emotional and financial scars, and the bad actors like Kimball, who help launder the proceeds of these scams, cause significant harm to victims and enable criminal networks," said Amanda Prestegard, Special Agent in Charge, IRS-CI Denver Field Office. "IRS-CI will continue to follow the money to expose and disrupt these schemes and hold the network of criminals involved accountable."
United States District Judge Charlotte N. Sweeney presided over the sentencing.
The case was investigated by the Internal Revenue Service - Criminal Investigation.
The prosecution was handled by Assistant United States Attorney Craig Fansler.
Case Number: 1:25-cr-00054-CNS