My Wife Stormed Home Furious. “Why Isn’t the Card Working? Mom Didn’t Get Your Paycheck…”
Uncovering the Fraud
I’d stood there in the hallway for a full minute, my heart doing something strange in my chest. Then I’d quietly put my shoes back on and left, went to a coffee shop, and sat there until my normal arrival time.
That night I’d started paying attention, really paying attention. The pattern was easy to see once I looked for it.
My salary was $4,800 monthly after taxes, before the promotion, deposited every other Friday. Gloria’s Friday withdrawal was $2,100 or $2,300 each paycheck. Rent was $1,800 paid from my account, utilities were $200 to $250 paid from my account, and groceries were $400 to $500 paid from my account.
What was left for me was whatever Gloria decided. Anna’s salary from her graphic design job at the marketing firm was $3,200 monthly after taxes. What Anna spent on household expenses was zero.
I’d pulled four years of bank statements and built a spreadsheet; the numbers were damning. Total I’d contributed to household expenses was $167,000. Total Anna had contributed was $0. Total Gloria had taken was $73,000, and that was just my salary.
It didn’t count the wedding costs I’d paid, the hospital bills when Ethan was born, or the new car Anna needed that I’d co-signed for. I’d also started noticing other things.
Gloria always had cash, lots of it. She’d pull out rolls of 20s at restaurants and at stores, paying for things while claiming she was broke and needed my paycheck to survive.
She’d mentioned once casually, like it was nothing, that she collected a widow’s pension from when her husband died. She said it was only $800 a month but it helped.
Except I’d met Gloria’s ex-husband last year at a Shell station on Western Avenue. James Mitchell was very much alive, pumping gas into a Ford F-150.
We’d made eye contact; he’d looked uncomfortable and driven away quickly. I hadn’t thought much about it at the time, figured they were divorced and he was embarrassed, but now I started digging.
The Meticulous Investigation
For 3 weeks I became someone I didn’t recognize: someone meticulous, patient, calculating. I created a new email address Gloria and Anna didn’t know about and started screenshotting everything.
I saved bank statements, text messages, and social media posts. I discovered Gloria was running a side business selling homemade alcohol.
She posted ads in local Facebook groups under a pseudonym: “Artisanal Vodka and Small Batch Wine Delivered to Your Door. Cash Only. No Receipts”. I found her unemployment benefit statements in the recycling bin.
She’d thrown them away, but I retrieved them, smoothed them out, and scanned them. She’d been collecting unemployment for 8 months, claiming she was actively seeking work.
She wasn’t seeking work; she was selling illegal alcohol and taking my money. Then I found Anna’s freelance income.
She’d been doing graphic design on the side through Fiverr, Upwork, and direct clients she’d found through Instagram. She was making an extra $1,500 to $2,000 a month and never reported a dollar of it.
I contacted a lawyer, Marcus Webb, 47 years old with 22 years practicing family law in Chicago. Not for divorce, not yet, just for consultation.
“Mr. Richardson,”
He said during our first meeting at a Starbucks in Lake View.
“What you’re describing is financial abuse. It’s not always recognized as such, but that’s what this is. Your wife and her mother have systematically controlled your income while hiding their own”.
“Can I protect myself?”
“Absolutely. First, get that new bank account and new card. Don’t tell them. Second, document everything. Third…”
He’d leaned forward.
“Are you sure about the pension fraud? Because if Gloria Mitchell is collecting survivor benefits while her ex-husband is alive, that’s federal fraud. That’s serious”.
“How do I verify it?”
“Public records. Death certificates are public information. If there’s no death certificate, she’s committing fraud”.
I’d spent $75 on public record searches. James Mitchell, born April 12th, 1967, had no death certificate and was very much alive.
He was a registered voter with an active driver’s license. Gloria was committing pension fraud and had been for at least 6 years based on the statements I found.
