A Kenai man has been indicted for allegedly forging identification documents that “appeared to be issued by federal agencies” like the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Central Intelligence Agency.
A federal grand jury indicted 41-year-old David Wayne Henry with unlawful production of a false identification document.
Henry was found to be in possession of various fraudulent IDs that were from the FBI, CIA, the Department of Defense, the U.S. Marine Corps and and the Department of Veterans Affairs, court document show. Each ID had personal identifying information of other individuals, but showed Henry’s name and photo.
“Creating false identification documents is a serious crime all by itself, but making false law enforcement and official government identifications raises the potential for harm to another level,” said Assistant U.S. Attorney Kevin R. Feldis in a statement. “The FBI responded quickly to seize the fake ID cards and will continue to investigate this case.”
Along with the completed IDs, 30 access cards with microchips, 500 access cards without microchips, hologram stickers, notary seals, laminating materials, printers, a laminator and electronic media were seized, according to a statement from the District Attorney’s office.
When he was indicted, Henry was already in state custody in a separate case involving forgery and drug possession. The District Attorney’s office would not comment on whether the two cases were related.
This is a developing story, please check back for updates.