Jesse Kipf Sentenced To Over 6 Years After Admitting To Faking His Death To Avoid Paying Child Support

In a shocking turn of events, Jesse Kipf, a 39-year-old man from Kentucky, has been sentenced to over 6 years in prison for a brazen scheme to fake his death to avoid paying child support.

Kipf’s elaborate plan involved staging his death, complete with a fake death certificate. However, his ruse unraveled when investigators discovered that he had been living under a false identity.

READ ALSO: Kayla Simmons Risks It All As She Shows Off Her Wet Body While In The Shower

Jesse Kipf, 39, was sentenced Monday in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Kentucky in a plea agreement on charges of computer fraud and aggravated identity theft.

In January 2023, Kipf accessed the Hawaii death registry system using the information of a physician living in another state and created a case for his own death, prosecutors said in a news release.

He completed a Hawaii death certificate worksheet, assigned himself as the medical certifier for the case and certified his death using the doctor’s digital signature — resulting in his being registered as a deceased person in many government databases, the release said.

Officials said he admitted to faking his own death in part “to avoid outstanding child support obligations.”

He owed more than $116,000, according to the sentencing memorandum.

He didn’t stop there.

Kipf also infiltrated other state death registry systems, private business networks and government and corporate networks “using credentials he stole from real people.” Then, he tried to sell access to those networks on the dark web, prosecutors said in the release.

Kipf acknowledged having databases of personal identifiable information on his electronic devices, including Social Security numbers and medical records, which he sold “to international buyers, including individuals from Algeria, Russia and Ukraine,” the sentencing memorandum said.

The damage to the state death registry systems included nearly $80,000 in repair costs, as well as “untold consequences in trying to rectify the networks and the harm to the individuals whose personally identifying information was exposed, stolen or misused,” the filing said.

Kipf must serve 85% of his prison sentence, and upon his release he will be under the supervision of the U.S. Probation Office for three years. His attorney did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

A federal grand jury initially indicted Kipf in November on five counts of computer fraud and three counts of aggravated identity theft, the Justice Department said in a news release. He was accused of illegally accessing state websites for Arizona, Hawaii and Vermont, as well as the businesses GuestTek Interactive Entertainment Ltd. and Milestone Inc.

As Jesse Kipf begins his sentence behind bars, it is a poignant reminder of the consequences of deceit and evasion. His actions have irreversibly damaged the trust placed in him and serve as a cautionary tale for others who may be tempted to follow a similar path. In the end, the truth will always come to light, and those who seek to deceive and defraud will ultimately face the consequences of their actions.

Previous Story

Juwan Johnson’s Wife Chanen Johnson Reveals She Only Makes Babies For Him While He Pays All The Bills

Next Story

Dwight Howard, Stephen Harper and Mr. Kitty Agree Their Threesome Was Consensual; Lawsuit Dismissed

Go toTop