Lawyer's daughter who proudly identified as con artist gets sentenced for bank fraud after using taxpayer cash to rent Miami mega-mansion
Danielle Miller, a former social media influencer who once proudly called herself a 'con artist,' will serve even more time in prison for bank fraud charges in Florida.
A former social media influencer who once proudly called herself a 'con artist' after scamming the federal government out of $1.5 million in COVID-related disaster loans will now be locked up for even longer.
Danielle Miller, the daughter of lawyer and former New York State Bar Association president Michael Miller, was sentenced Monday to 16 years in Florida state prison, after pleading guilty to 38 counts of fraudulently using personal identification information.
Prosecutors have said Miller came to Florida during the COVID pandemic, traveling to Sarasota with her was Ciera Blas, whom she met while locked up at New York City's infamous Rikers Island for using stolen credit card information to book appointments at a luxurious spa in the Upper West Side.
Miller then used others' identification information to defraud banks throughout the Sunshine State.
The scam finally unraveled when an alert manager notified the Sarasota County Sheriff's Office, who arrested her.
But this was not the first time Miller faced jail for bank fraud in the state, even going as far as proudly characterizing herself as a 'con artist' in a 2022 New York Magazine article.
That year, she was sentenced to five years in a Florida prison, after she attempted to use a California woman's passport to obtain more than $8,000 at a Chase bank drive-through window in 2020, according to the Bradenton Herald.
By 2023, federal authorities accused Miller of stealing the identities of more than 10 people to set up bank accounts and obtain loans - which she then used for travel and for lavish purchases, including $27,000-a-month rent at a waterside villa in Miami.
Danielle Miller, the daughter of lawyer and former New York State Bar Association president Michael Miller, was sentenced Monday to 16 years in Florida state prison, after pleading guilty to 38 counts of fraudulently using personal identification information
Prosecutors have said Miller came to Florida during the COVID pandemic, traveling to Sarasota, where she used others' identification information to defraud banks throughout the Sunshine State
Investigators said at the time that Miller communicated with individuals in countries as far away as Nigeria to pay for personal information they obtained through mail theft, phishing attacks and social engineering.
She would then use that information to obtain credit reports, drivers' licenses and credit cards of individuals from all over the US.