Florida woman convicted of massive Microsoft licensing fraud

An entrepreneur from Florida is now going to prison because of large-scale license fraud with Microsoft products. Heidi Richards bought physical certificates of authenticity and distributed the keys digitally, causing millions in damages.
Prison sentence after fraud involving millions in licenses
A 52-year-old entrepreneur from Florida has been sentenced to 22 months in prison. A US district court found it proven that Heidi Richards had been running a large-scale fraud involving Microsoft product keys for years. In addition to imprisonment, the court imposed a fine of $50,000 (approximately 42,745 euros). Richards ran the company Trinity Software Distribution and went by various names.
According to the indictment, she obtained thousands of so-called “Certificate of Authenticity” (COA) labels between 2018 and 2023. These stickers serve as proof of authenticity for Microsoft software and are usually permanently attached to hardware components. The illegal business model was based on purchasing the material separately from the associated hardware. As Bleeping computer mentioned according to reports, Richards purchased the stickers from a source in Texas for well below their regular market value. These were then sold on at a profit.
Manual entry in Excel
To turn the physical labels into digital goods, Richards instructed her employees to manually capture the product keys printed on them. The employees had to type the codes and transfer them to databases. Afterwards, the physical evidence was often destroyed to conceal the purely digital sale. A situation arose that contained a certain irony: To manage the illegally obtained keys for Windows and Office, the company used the Microsoft spreadsheet Excel. From there, the company sold the keys worldwide to customers who activated their software without having a legitimate license.
Damage in the millions
The financial scope of the fraud was significant: Richards and her accomplices paid over $5.1 million to their suppliers for the procurement of the labels during the period of the crime. By reselling it to unknowing end customers, the company generated corresponding profits, which are now being confiscated. The affected stickers often contain an explicit statement that separate distribution is prohibited. Nevertheless, the convict systematically ignored these warnings. The authorities classified the operation as money laundering and fraud because the proceeds from the sale of the stolen license codes were shifted several times in order to conceal their origin.