Security18:49 · Jul 6, 2005

Estonian Basketball Player Kar Krissa Charged in $2.2 Million Fraud Scheme in Kentucky

WallaCenter
Translated & summarized from Walla by baba
The story · English

Kar Krissa, a 25-year-old Estonian basketball player formerly regarded as a promising talent and a EuroLeague participant, has been arrested in Lexington, Kentucky, on charges related to a $2.2 million financial fraud. According to the U.S. Department of Justice, Krissa, who played for four U.S. college teams including Arizona, West Virginia, Kentucky, and Cincinnati, faces five counts of electronic fraud. He is expected to appear in federal court this week.

The indictment alleges that from August 2022 to February 2026, Krissa orchestrated a complex scam involving false representations, fake identities, and misleading messages to convince multiple victims to transfer large sums of money. He reportedly fabricated personal hardship stories, such as claiming his mother needed urgent cancer treatment or that his family was in danger, to elicit sympathy and financial support. In one instance, he impersonated his mother in communications, and in another, he used a false female identity named "Irene" to sign a fake repayment agreement for $100,000.

A particularly unusual claim in the case is that Krissa told a victim he would sell his organs to repay the money, part of an emotional pressure tactic to keep victims sending funds. The federal prosecution states Krissa used bank transfers and various communication methods to execute the fraud and seeks to seize all assets linked to the alleged crimes, including a $2.2 million judgment.

Federal prosecutor Matthew Harvey emphasized the damage financial scams cause to victims who believed they were helping someone in distress and vowed continued action against such fraudsters. Krissa's basketball career included stints in Europe with Bamberg and Žalgiris Kaunas before moving to the U.S. His peak college season was at West Virginia, averaging 11 points and 4.7 assists per game. Injuries limited his play at Kentucky and Cincinnati, and he was recently part of the Estonian team Tartu. His arrest came days before he was to join Kentucky's alumni team La Familia for The Basketball Tournament, from which he has now been withdrawn due to the charges.

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