Community Corner

Bridgeport Woman Arranged Sham Green-Card Marriages: Feds

A Bridgeport woman entered a plea in a case involving phony marriages intended to secure benefits for non-citizens.

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BRIDGEPORT, CT — A city woman pleaded guilty to charges that he conducted fraudulent marriages for people to receive green cards, according to a statement from federal prosecutors. Jodian Stephenson, aka "Jodian Gordon," 35, entered a guilty plea to a conspiracy charge stemming from her arrangement of numerous fraudulent marriages so that non-U.S. citizens would receive U.S. immigration benefits.

Stephenson, who operated Stephenson Immigration and Legal Services, LLC, is accused of conspiring with others to arrange 28 sham marriages between U.S. citizens and non-citizens residing in the U.S., according to the statement.

The purpose of these weddings was for non-citizens to obtain “lawful permanent residence” status, also known as a “green card.”

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One of the 28 sham marriages was between Stephenson, who is a citizen of Jamaica, and a U.S. citizen.

For each of the other 27 fraudulent marriages, Stephenson found and introduced a U.S. citizen to be the non-citizen’s purported spouse and helped the couple obtain a marriage license. She also organized the marriage ceremony and celebration, and coached the couple on how to make their marriage appear to be genuine despite their neither living together nor otherwise intending to remain actually married, according to the statement.

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As part of the scheme, Stephenson prepared several immigration documents needed as part of the non-citizen’s LPR application. She had the applicant and spouse sign the documents and, in many cases, mailed the documents to the U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service immigration authorities for the applicant. In some cases, Stephenson or her assistants prepared other false documents for the couple, such as a false lease that portrayed the couple as living together.

Stephenson typically charged between $17,000 and $20,000 to complete this process for a non-citizen, and the non-citizen spouse received between $2,000 and $4,000 for his or her participation.

During the investigation, Stephenson offered to arrange a sham marriage for a federal law enforcement agent working in an undercover capacity, and help obtain a green card for the undercover agent, in exchange for a proposed fee of $20,000, according to the statement.

In recorded conversations, Stephenson then introduced the undercover agent to a U.S. citizen and advised them about the ways they could create the appearance that they were validly married and living together as husband and wife.

She faces a maximum term of imprisonment of five years when she is sentenced by U.S. District Judge Michael P. Shea in Hartford. A sentencing date is not scheduled.

Stephenson has been released on a $250,000 bond since her arrest on June 22, 2018.

Six other individuals involved in this scheme previously pleaded guilty.

This investigation is being conducted by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), and U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Service’s Office of Fraud Detection and National Security. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Henry K. Kopel.


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