Court: Man put clothes, ID on stand-in corpse in $2M scheme

Last updated on: 01 December,2018 08:53 pm

Vorotinov was indicted in 2015 on one count of mail fraud.

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — A Minnesota man accused of faking his own death seven years ago to collect a ‎‎$2 million life insurance policy arranged for a stand-in corpse to be dressed in his clothes in Moldova, ‎according to a judge’s detention order.‎

Igor Vorotinov, 54, also planted his identification on the body before placing the corpse along a road in ‎the Eastern European country, a U.S. judge said in rejecting Vorotinov’s request to be freed pending ‎trial.‎

U.S. Magistrate Judge Katherine M. Menendez ruled Wednesday that Vorotinov posed too great a ‎flight risk. In her ruling, Menendez said Vorotinov showed "substantial resourcefulness and cunning."‎

Vorotinov was indicted in 2015 on one count of mail fraud. He was arrested this month and returned to ‎the U.S.‎

Prosecutors allege in court documents that Vorotinov took out the life insurance policy in spring 2010 ‎and designated then-wife Irina Vorotinov as the primary beneficiary. The couple divorced later that ‎year.‎

In 2011, Irina Vorotinov, 51, identified a corpse in Moldova as her husband’s, prosecutors allege. She ‎then returned to the U.S. with a death certificate and cremated remains and received the life ‎insurance payment. Money was then transferred to her son, and to accounts in Switzerland and ‎Moldova.‎

She has pleaded guilty to her role and is serving a three-year sentence. Alkon Vorotinov, 28, pleaded ‎guilty to one count and was sentenced to probation.‎

After the insurance payout was made, prosecutors spoke by phone in May 2016 with Igor Vorotinov in ‎hopes of persuading him to return to the U.S. But he told investigators he would rather live with his ‎new love interest on an apple farm, according to the judge’s filing.‎

The identity of the corpse is still unclear, the Minneapolis Star Tribune reported . The scheme also ‎included a 2011 funeral service at a Minneapolis cemetery, where an urn was placed in a niche. Tests ‎later determined the remains were not Vorotinov’s.‎

Vorotinov pleaded not guilty Tuesday. He was returned to jail and awaits trial, tentatively planned for ‎January.‎