09/02/2025 / By Lance D Johnson
A man who was sworn to protect the vulnerable – a federal investigator tasked with stopping financial predators in their tracks – has instead become the predator himself—siphoning hundreds of thousands from elderly victims to fund his own hedonistic spree of poolside luxuries, Caribbean cruises, and midday trysts with escorts. This isn’t the plot of a Netflix crime drama; it’s the real-life indictment of Scott Kelley, a former U.S. Postal Inspection Service fraud unit leader who allegedly spent years exploiting the very system he was supposed to safeguard.
Key points:
For seven years, Scott Kelley was the face of justice for the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Boston. As the team leader of the Mail Fraud Unit, his job was to protect victims of financial scams—many of them elderly, many of them desperate. But according to a 45-count federal indictment, Kelley wasn’t protecting anyone. He was preying on them.
Here’s how it worked: Scammers—often based in Jamaica—would trick elderly Americans into believing they’d won a lottery or sweepstakes. The catch? They had to mail cash to claim their “winnings.” When these packages were flagged as potential fraud, postal inspectors like Kelley were supposed to intercept them, document the cash, and return it to the sender. Instead, prosecutors allege, Kelley ordered postal workers to send the packages to him—then opened them, stole the cash, and covered his tracks.
Over 1,950 packages were diverted to Kelley. Seven victims have been identified so far, ranging in age from 71 to 82. One sent $19,100. Another, $1,400. None of them ever saw their money again. And in a particularly cruel twist, Kelley allegedly met with one victim in person, telling them their package was lost and that “their loss was their own fault because they had mailed cash.
But Kelley didn’t stop there. In August 2022, he was transferred to lead the Mail Theft Unit—a promotion that gave him even more access to intercepted packages. And when that wasn’t enough, he stole $7,000 from an evidence locker, using a subordinate’s key to access the vault before framing them for the theft in an official memo.
The audacity is staggering. But what’s even more disturbing is the system that allowed it.
Kelley’s case isn’t just about one man’s greed. It’s about a system where accountability is optional. The emails obtained via FOIA—the same kind that have exposed other scandals in the DA’s office—reveal a pattern of criminal behavior among those sworn to uphold the law.
In one exchange, multiple employees discuss dividing stolen money, arguing over who gets what. In another, they openly strategize about how to avoid detection. These aren’t rogue actors; they’re federal employees using government email servers to plan crimes, as if they know no one will stop them.
And why would they think otherwise? Consider the lack of oversight that allowed Kelley to:
This isn’t just individual corruption. It’s institutional rot. And it raises a terrifying question: If the people tasked with stopping fraud are the ones committing it, who’s left to protect the public?
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Tagged Under:
Boston scandal, criminal conspiracy, DOJ investigation, elderly scams, escorts scandal, evidence tampering, federal indictment, financial crimes, fraud investigator, government corruption, Jamaican lottery scam, law enforcement abuse, mail theft, money laundering, pool renovations, postal fraud, Tax Evasion, USPS corruption, victim blame, wire fraud
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