How much prison time should a fake Indian chief get?

Malcolm Webber will soon face sentencing as the convicted chief of a fake American Indian tribe that duped thousands of illegal immigrants out of money with the promise of U.S. citizenship.

Lawyers in the case are asking U.S. Senior District Judge Wesley Brown to consider sentences between eight months and 18 years for the 70-year-old Webber.

A jury in August convicted Webber on six counts, including immigration fraud, for selling memberships in the unrecognized Kaweah Indian Nation for hundreds of dollars. As the case unfolded in Wichita, evidence showed that Webber used Hispanic churches to recruit members, which eventually reached 10,000 to 12,000 nationwide.

Prosecutor Brent Anderson said Webber should get maximum time of more than 17 years for preying on vulnerable victims:

Here, we have thousands and thousands of persons who gave what little money they may have had to Mr. Webber in the hope he could make good on his promise of making them U.S. citizens. … (They) either did not know that or naively believed, in their desperation to stay in the United States, that he somehow could make that happen.

But Kurt Kerns argues in Webber’s defense that the people who joined were in the U.S. illegally and so were participants in the crime – not victims. Kerns also disputed the prosecution’s contention that Webber carried out an elaborate scheme over years to promote fraud:

The government contends that because tribal members received official looking membership cards and certificates, this somehow makes this a sophisticated operation. This is the equivalent of saying that because someone has nice handwriting, they must be a writer.

Anderson said no court has ever contemplated the kind of lengths Webber went to in selling his “tribe:”

Mr. Webber created an entire government … complete with a secretary of state, cabinet members, articles of incorporation, multiple offices complete with official seals … an Indian store complete with Kaweah trinkets and merchandise, actual Kaweah Indian Nation license plates, and a police department with vehicles, uniformed officers, badges and guns.

Kerns is asking the judge to compare the sentences given to those other chiefs, secretaries of state and police officers – all of whom received about a year or less following guilty pleas.

Webber faces Brown for sentencing at 10 a.m. Friday in U.S. District Court in Wichita.

Deputy “chief,” “police officer” of bogus Indian set for plea

Updated: A man who has been described in court hearings as a deputy “chief” and a man who told people he was a “police officer” of the reservation for a non-existent American Indian tribe have decided to plead guilty.

They are the latest to admit guilt in the scheme of the Kaweah Indian Nation, a fake tribe that purported to sell memberships to illegal immigrants for hundreds of dollars with the false promise of legal citizenship.

Chuck Flynn has been charged with being one of the top officers of the so-called Kaweah Indian tribe. He’s set for a change of plea hearing at 11 a.m. Thursday before U.S. Senior District Judge Wesley E. Brown.

Britton Bergman also is set for plea before Brown, on Aug. 1 rescheduled for 10:15 a.m.Tuesday. Bergman, a college student, had claimed to be a policeman for the Kaweah’s at their office in Wichita.

What they’re pleading guilty to won’t become public until after the hearings.

Malcom Webber, the leader who also went by “Grand Chief Thunderbird IV,” and other defendants are set for trial Aug. 5.

Secretary for fake Indian tribe in Wichita pleads guilty

Eduviges del Carmen Zamora was in this country as a legal resident when she went to work selling memberships in a fake Indian tribe to illegal aliens in Wichita.

Zamora pleaded guilty this morning to having knowledge of a felony that she didn’t report to authorities. The felony in this case is mail fraud.

She worked as a secretary in the Wichita home office of the unrecognized Kaweah Indian tribe, one of the most fascinating cases to be going through the justice system here.

Prosecutors say illegal immigrants in nearly a dozen states spent some $200 each for memberships in the fake Kaweah Indian tribe with the hopes that it would give them the proper papers to stay in the country. Malcom Webber is charged as the leader under the alias of “Grand Chief Thunderbird the IV.” Trial is set for Webber, who was 69 when he was charged last September, and the other defendants later this year.