It started as a scheme from behind bars but quickly spiraled into something far more serious. Inmates rarely make headlines for targeting professional athletes, yet NBA and NFL players reportedly became victims of a complex phishing and fraud operation led by Georgia prisoner Kwamaine Jerell Ford.

Federal authorities allege that Ford‘s criminal activities escalated to identity theft, wire fraud, and sex trafficking.

Ford, who previously served time for computer fraud and aggravated identity theft, allegedly stole around $325,000 from victims using stolen banking information.

Now, prosecutors say Ford engaged in an even more audacious scheme while still in prison, targeting high-profile athletes and recruiting a woman under false pretenses to participate in commercial sex acts.

“While serving time for stealing credit card numbers from athletes and celebrities to fund his lifestyle, Ford allegedly engaged in the same conduct again,” said U.S. Attorney Theodore S. Hertzberg.

“Disturbingly, the indictment alleges that Ford went even further and used a fraudulent online persona to traffic a young woman and coerce her to produce hidden camera videos of commercial sex acts with unknowing individuals.”

How did Ford’s the scheme work?

Cybersecurity experts say the techniques used in the alleged scheme are part of a broader pattern of “social engineering,” a method in which attackers manipulate victims into giving up sensitive information rather than breaking into systems directly.

According to prosecutors, Ford operated a two-pronged plan to access NBA and NFL players’ Apple accounts starting in November 2020.

First, he impersonated a well-known adult film star, promising victims sexually explicit recordings. Simultaneously, he posed as Apple customer support, asking players to provide their usernames, passwords, and Multi-Factor Authentication codes.

Once he gained access, Ford allegedly extracted credit and debit card information from the athletes’ Apple accounts and used it to cover thousands of dollars in personal expenses.

The case escalated further when Ford reportedly coerced a female victim into performing commercial sex acts with professional athletes in May 2021.

Prosecutors say he promised to advance the woman’s modeling career, arranged her travel, negotiated payments from the athletes, and used false identities to intimidate and control her.

Many of the acts were secretly recorded without the athletes’ knowledge or consent.

Kwamaine Ford clearly did not learn from his prior conviction for a similar scheme,” said FBI Georgia Acting Special Agent in Charge Peter Ellis.

“This time, he allegedly escalated his criminal activity – stealing identities and money while also moving into coercion and sex trafficking.”

Ford appeared in court on Friday, entering a not guilty plea to nine counts of wire fraud, seven counts of computer fraud, one count of access device fraud, four counts of aggravated identity theft, and one count of sex trafficking. A U.S. magistrate judge ordered him detained without bail pending trial.

Ford‘s trial date has not yet been set. Authorities will likely continue investigations into other victims and digital fraud linked to his schemes. Meanwhile, NBA and NFL teams are reviewing internal cybersecurity measures to prevent similar breaches.

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