Page 2 THE REVERE ADVOCATE – FRIDAY, MAY 31, 2024 Mid-grade Regular $3.87 3.31 73 67 Over 45 Years of Excellence! Full Service $2.99 Order online at angelosoil.com Chelsea woman used fake identifications to impersonate over 120 customers of a wireless company and purchase cellular phones and accessories B Need a hall for your special event? The Schiavo Club, located at 71 Tileston Street, Everett is available for your Birthdays, Anniversaries, Sweet 16 parties and more? For more info, call (857) 249-7882 Dan - 1972 We Sell Cigars & Accessories! Sell Cigars & Accessories! MAJOR BRANDS AT DISCOUNT PRICES! Singles * Tins * Bundles * Boxes * Travel Humidors * Desk Top Humidors * Many Types of Lighters * Ash Trays * Juuls * Vapes * Glass Pipes * Rewards Program * CBD Infused Products * GIFTS UNDER $30 - GIFT CERTIFICATES Don’t Wait! Get What You Smoke NOW! Buy Your Smokes by the Box & SAVE!! Join Our FREE Rewards Program & SAVE Even More! NEW HOURS STARTING JUNE 1ST Humidor Specials! Starting as LOW as $99. Complete with Accessories NEW HOURS STARTING JUNE 1ST: OPEN MON. : OPEN MON. - SA - SAT.., 9, 9 AM - 7 PM / SUN. AM - 7 PM / SUN., 9, 9 AM - 6 PM R.Y.O. TOBACCO & TUBES ON SALE! Green Label Cigar Sale! Buy 2 Cigars, Get One FREE! A.B.C. CIGAR 170 REVERE ST., REVERE (781) 289-4959 AM - 6 PM R OSTON — A Chelsea woman pleaded guilty yesterday in federal court in Boston to conspiring to possess and use false identifi cations as part of an identity theft scheme to target a wireless company. Perla Soto, 24, pleaded guilty to an Information charging conspiracy to possess and use more than fi ve false identifi cations. U.S. District Court Judge Julie E. Kobick scheduled sentencing for Aug. 9, 2024. Soto was originally charged by criminal complaint in March 2024. From January 2022 through November 2023, Soto was captured on surveillance video conducting 20 transactions where she posed as customers of a wireless company. These transactions took place in retail stores throughout the United States. Celebrating Our 52ndCelebrating Our 52nd Yearear Chris 2024 Soto used counterfeit driver’s licenses and identifi cation bearing her photograph and the personal identifying information of customers of the wireless company in order to conduct transactions at these retail stores. While posing as the customer, Soto would purchase new phones and accessories on the customer’s account. Working as part of a larger group, Soto provided these fraudulently obtained phones and accessories to other coconspirators who would sell them on the black market. In total, over 120 customers of the wireless company had their personal information utilized in transactions totaling over $290,000 in fraudulently obtained phones and accessories. The charge of conspiring to possess of fi ve or more identifi cation documents with intent to use them unlawfully provides for a sentence of up to fi ve years in prison, three years of supervised release a fi ne of up to $250,000 and restitution. Sentences are imposed by a federal district court judge based upon the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and statutes which govern the determination of a sentence in a criminal case. Acting United States Attorney Joshua S. Levy; Jodi Cohen, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, Boston Division; and John E. Mawn Jr., Interim Colonel of the Massachusetts State Police made the announcement. Assistant U.S. Attorney Philip A. Mallard of the Organized Crime & Gang Unit is prosecuting the case. Expanding Opportunities City of Revere hosts a Union Trade Fair at Revere High School EVERE, MA — On May 23, Mayor Patrick M. Keefe Jr. and the City of Revere Department of Workforce Development and Youth Engagement teamed up with Revere Public Schools, colleges, and career and external learning opportunities to bring a Union Trade Fair to Revere High School. The trade fair allowed students the opportunity to meet and learn about diff erent union trade organizations throughout the Commonwealth, as well as the United States Armed Services. Representatives from all the major Union Trades were present to answer questions and provide information about their own apprenticeship programs. Some of the groups attending included: 1. Laborers’, Local 22 2. North Atlantic State Regional Council of Carpenters 3. Painters and Allied Trades DC 35 4. Sheet Metal Workers International Association, Local 17 5. Building Pathways 6. Plumbers and Gasfitters US, Local 12 7. Operating Engineers, Local 4 8. Teamsters, Local 25 9. United States Marines 10. Franklin Cummings Tech 11. NorthShore Community College This fair marks an important expansion of trade-centric programming in Revere Public Schools. Mayor Keefe expressed his support, stating, “We have heard families and students asking for more opportunities to learn about the trades and unions, and we answered. This is a great opportunity for our students. We want to celebrate our students that are taking interest in skilled labor, trade work, and the Armed Forces.” “We encourage any student interested in pursuing a career in a Union Trade after high school to come and learn about their apprenticeship program,” added Gerry Visconti, Director of Workforce Development and Youth Engagement.
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