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A Pokémon card.
Oudomsine received $85,000 from the loan program, prosecutors said, and lied about how many people he employed. Photograph: Romuald Meigneux/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock
Oudomsine received $85,000 from the loan program, prosecutors said, and lied about how many people he employed. Photograph: Romuald Meigneux/Sipa/Rex/Shutterstock

US man jailed for using coronavirus relief loan to buy $57,000 Pokémon card

This article is more than 2 years old
  • Vinath Oudomsine forfeits trading card as part of plea deal
  • Oudosmine given three years after pleading guilty to wire fraud

A Georgia man was sentenced to three years in prison after illegally obtaining a coronavirus relief loan and using more than $57,000 of the money to buy a collectible Pokémon card, authorities said on Monday.

Vinath Oudomsine of Dublin, Georgia, agreed to forfeit the costly trading card, which featured the Pokémon character Charizard, as part of a plea agreement, said David Estes, the acting US attorney of the southern district of Georgia, in a news release.

Oudomsine, 31, pleaded guilty in October to a single count of wire fraud. Prosecutors said in a legal filing that he submitted false information to the US Small Business Administration last year when applying for a Covid-19 relief loan for an “entertainment services” business he claimed to own.

They said he lied about how many people he employed as well as his business’s annual revenues.

Oudomsine received $85,000 from the loan program, prosecutors said, and used it to buy the trading card for $57,789.

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