The Washington Post reports:
The illegal sale of coronavirus vaccination cards began as a simple operation out of David Hodges’s home in Lewes, Del., federal prosecutors said. Last February, Hodges, a paramedic who worked at a coronavirus vaccination site, started printing blank vaccine cards he found online, a complaint states.
But by the time investigators discovered the scheme months later, prosecutors said, the operation had become more sophisticated. Hodges had taken blank vaccination cards from his workplace, according to the complaint, and pocketed nearly $1,300 after selling an unspecified number of the documents.
Read the full article.
A paramedic stole coronavirus vaccine cards from his workplace, then sold them to unvaccinated buyers, feds say https://t.co/lUmB4pbzOL
— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) January 5, 2022
Delaware paramedic David Hodges, who was assigned to a vaccination facility, has been charged with selling stolen, but real, vaccination cards to unvaccinated buyers. He faces six months in prison and a $5,000 fine. pic.twitter.com/fBctzxETr6
— Mike Sington (@MikeSington) January 5, 2022