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This Ex-Marine Allegedly Used His Service Record to Scam Thousands in First-Class Flights, Including This Scary Detail…

Prosecutors allege 29-year-old retired Marine Corps veteran Dior Jay-Jarrett faked deployment documents to score time off and free flights

A retired United States Marine Corps veteran and Federal Air Marshal is feeling the heat after being accused of orchestrating an elaborate nearly three-year scam that involved lying about his military service to score thousands of dollars in free vacations for himself, family members and friends. Dior Jay-Jarrett of Queens, New York, has been charged with wire fraud, according to a complaint filed on March 19 by the Southern District of New York.

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Court documents allege Jay-Jarrett, who served in the Marines from 2013 until he was medically retired in November 2022, โ€œ[falsified] military deployment documents to obtain free travel benefits.โ€ His scheme started in October 2021, when he got a job as an airline baggage handler. After one week on the job, Jay-Jarrett asked for eight months leave claiming he was being deployed to Kuwait. The only problem โ€“ he wasnโ€™t actually deployed to Kuwait and the documents he shared with his supervisor were signed by a military official who retired in 1997.

The complaint goes on to allege Jay-Jarrett also asked the airline for extended military leave in June 2023 and July 2024, using his military status to take advantage of travel benefits including โ€œunlimited, free flights on Airline-1 alongside ticketed family members or travel companions.โ€

All in all, the court says he took โ€œat least 130 such flights โ€” and his family and friends approximately 20 more โ€” at a value of nearly $70,000,โ€ including first-class flights to Los Angeles, London and Dublin

But he didnโ€™t stop there: The courtโ€™s complaint says that while working for the airline, Jay-Jarrett got a job as a Federal Air Marshal, which they say he used to bypass the airport security line and fly with service weapon.

Although Jay-Jarrett may have thought he had all of the details of his scheme sorted out, he didnโ€™t think his bosses would check his social media. Court documents cited a Facebook post he shared about a free five-day trip to Cabo San Lucas he took in August 2022, which he described as one of his โ€œfavorite solo tripsโ€ as evidence supporting his bogus military leave.

If heโ€™s found guilty, Jay-Jarrett could face a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison.

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