Chicago rapper G Herbo charged in wire fraud scheme

G Herbo, whose real name is Herbert Wright III, and his crew allegedly used stolen credit card information to buy puppies, rent villas and luxury cars.

SHARE Chicago rapper G Herbo charged in wire fraud scheme
Rapper G Herbo speaks Saturday outside Overton Elementary School in Bronzeville during the Peace Walk & Community Give-Back Celebration.

Rapper G Herbo speaks outside Overton Elementary School in Bronzeville during the Peace Walk & Community Give-Back Celebration.

Pat Nabong/Sun-Times file photo

Chicago rapper G Herbo and several members of his crew were charged in federal court with using stolen credit card details and IDs to pay for private jets, expensive meals and designer puppies over the last four years.

G Herbo, whose real name is Herbert Wright III, is charged with wire fraud and aggravated identity theft, according to the indictment filed in U.S. District Court in Springfield, Massachusetts.

Also charged in the scheme are Joseph Williams, Antonio Strong, Steven Hayes Jr., Demario Sorrells and Terrence Bender, the 14-count indictment states.

According to the indictment, the conspiracy allegedly started around March 2016, when Wright, 25, and his co-defendants allegedly obtained stolen credit card information from “dark web sites” and co-conspirators.

They also allegedly used fake IDs, driver’s licenses and e-mail accounts in the names of aliases and real businesses to fool companies and individuals, the indictment states.

“Generally, because the defendants and their co-conspirators provided authentic payment card information, the defrauded businesses and individuals successfully processed their transactions and provided the goods and services,” the indictment states.

Wright and his crew would allegedly pass the stolen information to each other through texts, social media messages, emails and phone calls, according to the indictment.

In one such case, Strong, identifying himself as Wright’s manager, allegedly contacted a pet company around Nov. 29, 2017, to order two designer puppies for Wright with a stolen credit card, the indictment states.

Over a text, Strong allegedly sent the pet company a screenshot of a fake driver’s license. When the company asked Strong to take a picture of himself holding up the license, he refused, the indictment states.

Growing suspicious, the company asked Wright to message them from his own Instagram account. Strong then sent a text message to Wright, telling him to “Check DM. Hurry just message that b*** hello,” the indictment alleges. Wright sent the message and confirmed the order with the company.

Bender allegedly used the same stolen credit card to pay for a car service to deliver the puppies to Chicago, according to the indictment.

In another case, Wright allegedly sent a direct message to Strong over Instagram around July 7, 2019, requesting a reservation for a private villa in Jamaica, the indictment states. Strong allegedly made the reservation using stolen payment information, and Wright allegedly stayed at the villa with his associates from July 7 to July 11.

The indictment outlines several other alleged fraudulent payments, including the rental of a Maybach S600 and Bentley CGTC by Sorrells on March 6, 2017.

Herbo, a South Side native, grew into something of a hometown hero as a teenager in the early 2010s, helping lead Chicago’s drill music to international prominence alongside fellow rappers and collaborators Chief Keef and Lil Durk. His music has been lauded for its no-frills, penetrative approach to the violent realities he faced growing up in the city, and, in more recent years, the toll that they took on his mental health.

His latest album, “PTSD,” was released in February, and he performed the title track with Chance the Rapper earlier this month on “The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”

Though the rapper has been slapped with weapons and battery charges in recent years, he’s most recently made headlines for his community outreach on the South Side, hosting food drives and back-to-school giveaways in West Pullman and Bronzeville.

Contributing: Sam Kelly

The Latest
District leaders will join teachers for a lobbying day in the state capital. Critics say the day away from classrooms is inappropriate.
Experts say the deaths of the family — consisting of two adults and one offspring — may be related to rodenticide poisoning.
Jackson, one of Williams’ good friends, caught 35 passes for 267 yards last season after transferring to Nevada. He is in camp on a tryout basis.
Karol Chwiesiuk spent roughly 10 minutes inside the Capitol as a mob attempted to prevent Congress from certifying Joe Biden’s presidential electoral victory.
Public Safety Committee Chairman Brian Hopkins (2nd) plans to hold City Council hearings to find out how many CTA buses will be shuttling delegates to and from the United Center, whether dedicated bus lanes will be used and whether the transit agency will be able to recruit enough employees without “adjusting service.”