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Indictment: Scammers used trickery, forged docs to defraud Dolly Parton's Gatlinburg wildfires fund

Dolly Parton announced her My People Fund, a coordinated effort with the Dollywood Foundation and area businesses with which she has ties, in the days immediately after the wildfires that devastated parts of Parton’s native Sevier County.

Five people including a mother and son are accused in an elaborate scheme to defraud a fund set up to aid Gatlinburg wildfire victims.

Debra Kay Catlett, her son, Chad Alan Chambers, and three associates - Rocco Boscalia, Ammie Lyons and Esther Pridemore - are charged in a sealed presentment handed up by a Sevier County grand jury earlier this year with a conspiracy to defraud the Dollywood Foundation's My People Fund.

Entertainer and Sevier County native Dolly Parton established the fund soon after last year's wildfires that claimed 14 lives and destroyed thousands of homes and businesses.

David Dotson, president of the Dollywood Foundation, said Wednesday the My People Fund aided 900 families to the tune of $9 million in the first six months after the fires.

He said the accused scammers were among those - initially. But thanks to an investigation led by Gatlinburg Police Department Detective Rodney Burns, the rip-off scheme was discovered and stymied soon after it was launched, he noted.

The scammers made off with roughly $12,000 before the alleged plot was unmasked, records show.

"It's unfortunate but when something good happens, there's always a handful who want to exploit things," Dotson said. "They went through extremely elaborate means."

Chambers is identified in the indictments as the chief architect of the alleged scam, although it was his mother's database of rental properties that made it possible, according to records reviewed by USA Today Network-Tennessee.

Those records show Catlett had worked as a photographer for real estate publications in Sevier County and, as a result, had a database of rental cabins complete with addresses and owners' names.

People at the LeConte Center in Pigeon Forge line up to receive their final Dollywood Foundation checks.

Using that database, the alleged scammers identified cabins that had burned and, using property tax records, drew up fake leases and forged the owners' signatures.

The scammers then allegedly used the forged leases to obtain temporary driver's licenses with those corresponding addresses via a service the Tennessee Department of Safety had established to help wildfire victims whose licenses had been lost in the fires.

The indictments allege the scammers presented the temporary driver's licenses and leases to the My People Fund as proof they had been displaced by the wildfires when, in fact, none of the five were impacted by the fires. Two of them didn't even live in Sevier County, and a third was in jail at the time, records show.

Dotson said the Dollywood Foundation quickly realized the temporary driver's licenses - offered in good faith as a way to help residents "who lost everything in the fire" - could be used with ill intent, so the foundation stopped accepting those as proof of displacement by the fires.

Cars driving into  Gatlinburg are greeted with a "Mountain Tough" sign Dec. 9, 2016. Gatlinburg re-opened to the public today after wildfires damaged the city early last week.

"No one had to prove anything to get the temporary driver's licenses," Dotson said. "We started having suspicions ... None of these folks (the alleged scammers) made it through the entire distribution process (before being discovered). Law enforcement responded in a very timely and thorough manner."

The quintet of suspects face charges including money laundering, criminal conspiracy and felony theft. An arraignment date in Sevier County Criiminal Court had not been set Wednesday.

Dotson said each family legitimately displaced by the fire was given $1,000 per month for five months after the deadly blaze and then $5,000 in the sixth month. Funds left over after that initial six-month commitment made by Parton and the foundation were then turned over to another wildfire relief organization, Mountain Tough, he said.

The case is being prosecuted by Sevier County Assistant District Attorney General Ron Newcomb.

A worker removes debris from around an elevator shaft on the grounds of Westgate Resort in Gatlinburg Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2016. Parts of Westgate were severely damaged during the November wildfires.