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VA employees stole $ 6 Million of Mr. Cobbs original Claim for Benefits and Compensation

U.S. Attorney John R. Lausch Jr., has covered up for VA employees stealing $ 6 Million of Mr. Cobbs, Original Claim For Disability Compensation.
VA employees stole $ 6 Million of Mr. Cobbs, Original Claim For Disability Compensation U.S. Attorney John R. Lausch Jr., has covered up for VA employees
The US Attorney John R. Lausch Jr., and U.S Attorney Kristine Elise Rau and U.S. Attorney Douglas G. Snodgrass represent Defendants employed by the Department of Veterans affairs, in the Northern District Eastern Division Dirks and Federal Building Federal Court, and the three named U.S. Attorneys John R. Lausch Jr., and U.S. Attorney Kristine Elise Rau and U.S. Attorney Douglas G. Snodgrass, all the named U.S. Attorneys, are using the laws unlawfully in violation of Mr. Calvin Ray Cobbs Sr., lawsuit case Docket # 18-cv-00859 against the Department of Veterans Affairs to justify their criminal actions of VA employees stealing possible over $ 6 Million of Mr. Cobbs, Original Claim filed for VA Disability Compensation, and Northern District Eastern Division Dirks and Federal Building, Federal Court 219 S. Dearborn Chicago, IL 60604 U.S. Attorney John R. Lausch Jr., and U.S. Attorney Kristine Elise Rau and U.S. Attorney Douglas G. Snodgrass used Super Attorney Michael J. Grant who has State and federal Court in his pocket and Super Attorney Michael J. Grant not only involved himself in several and multiple conspired, conspiracy’s in helping anyone he defends that is a defendant that he defends and want to fake their Death to win the case Super Attorney Michael J. Grant will help his client who ask him to fake their Death, that’s what Super Attorney Michael J. Grant will Do, and in the courts making fake Death Certificates.

AFFIDAVIT
VA EMPOYEES STOLE $6 MILLON, et, al., FROM VETERAN MR. COBBS ORIGINAL VA COMPENSATION CLAIM AND HERE IS A SIMILAR STORY of exactly what happened to veteran Mr. Cobbs, following below:

WRITTEN Ben White, The Washington Post CHICAGO TRIBUNE

The federal government has charged one current and two former Veterans Affairs employees in Georgia with embezzling nearly $6 million from the department to buy houses, cars, antiques, a Barbie doll collection, a hovercraft and a submarine.
According to a criminal complaint filed Tuesday, Sarah Prater, Ernest Thornton and Kathy Eselhorst used the records of dead veterans with no beneficiaries to generate and share more than 200 fraudulent payments beginning in 1996.
They were freed on a $50,000 unsecured bond Tuesday after a hearing before a federal magistrate.
On Wednesday, the government began confiscating property that may have been purchased with the stolen VA money. The items included a hovercraft and SportSub III Submarine that belonged to Thornton, and antiques and a Barbie doll collection that belonged to Eselhorst.
The complaint filed by the U.S. attorney's office in Atlanta described the scheme this way: Prater, a veterans claims examiner and the congressional liaison for the Atlanta regional office, would use her security clearance to temporarily "resurrect" deceased veterans.
She would then change the name of the veteran to "Ernest L. Thornton" and make the effective date of the claim several years before the processing of the claim, generating large retroactive benefit payments.
The payments would be sent to Thornton at various post office boxes registered either in Thornton's or Eselhorst's name. Thornton would then disburse part of the money to Eselhorst and Prater.
Thornton, a Navy veteran, and Eselhorst are retired from the VA.
The U.S. attorney's office has uncovered 20 altered claims and 246 fraudulent payments totaling $5.9 million.
Thornton came under scrutiny after he made two deposits totaling more than $200,000 to his Navy Federal Credit Union account this month. Both were retroactive disability payments in his name, but each had a different VA claim number and Social Society number. Investigators then discovered 20 different claims in Thornton's name.
acknowledged it in a separate interview, according to the complaint.
Thornton later asked to be re-interviewed, telling authorities he had been romantically involved with Eselhorst since 1997 and had told her he wanted to buy an ultra-light plane. A week later, the government filing quoted him as saying he received a check for $7,000.
Eselhorst told investigators that the scheme was hatched to "get even" with the VA.
Donald Samuel, an Atlanta attorney representing Eselhorst and Prater, said his clients were turning over property because they were compelled to do so, not because they were admitting guilt. A preliminary hearing in the case is scheduled for Sept. 14.