Second Round of Indictments for Locksmith Company Accused of Defrauding Missourians

David Peer and Moshe Aharoni accused of defrauding Missourians. - Pinella County Sheriff via Angie's List
Pinella County Sheriff via Angie's List
David Peer and Moshe Aharoni accused of defrauding Missourians.
The U.S. Attorney's Office of Eastern Missouri last week handed down another round of indictments last week against Dependable Locks, a Florida-based locksmith accused of extorting customers in Missouri.

This marks the second time the U.S. Attorney's Office has indicted the company here in Missouri. In 2009, prosecutors charged two Florida business men and Eliyahu Barhanun of Creve Coeur with overcharging clients, employing illegal immigrants from Israel and sending proceeds from their ill-gotten gains to a real-estate company in that country.

Court records show that the U.S. dropped its case against Barhanum last February but his alleged partners in the scheme -- David Peer, 31, Moshe Aharoni, 30, both of Clearwater, Florida  -- remain under investigation. Those two men and a third individual of unknown origins -- Adam Olivkovich -- were charged last week with felony mail fraud, wire fraud and conspiracy to harbor illegal aliens for private financial gain.

The indictment alleges that Dependable Locks engaged in deceptive marketing by purchasing directory listings and advertisements in cities across the United States that identified the business to the public as a set of local locksmith companies. The company's listings used multiple business names, local phone numbers, and fake local addresses that had no affiliation with the company. Phone calls to the listed phone numbers were automatically routed to the company's call center in Clearwater, Florida.

In addition, telephone operators for Dependable Locks were instructed by managers to mislead customers to believe that they would be charged around $54 for a car lockout, while the responding technician was instructed by managers to charge up to $179 for a lockout. Technicians used techniques such as accusing the consumer who objected to the overcharge of "theft of services," threatening to call the police, withholding the customer's keys or driver's license to compel payment, or following the customer to an ATM machine to ensure payment.
Scroll to read more St. Louis Metro News articles

Newsletters

Join Riverfront Times Newsletters

Subscribe now to get the latest news delivered right to your inbox.