A Florida bagel seller is set for a hearing Tuesday in the U.S. District Court for Wyoming on claims that he worked with a co-conspirator to deposit a fraudulent check for a half million dollars into his own business account using banks in Cheyenne and elsewhere.
Daniel K. McDougal faces one count of aiding and abetting a counterfeit obligations operation, punishable by up to 20 years in prison and up to $250,000 in fines.
McDougal’s upcoming hearing comes more than six months after his alleged co-conspirator, Kennard Bouk III, pleaded guilty to bank fraud and was sentenced to 41 months in prison in May, court documents say.
The trouble started in November 2022, when the U.S. Treasury issued a check for $560,625 to a Los Angeles insurance company, says an evidentiary affidavit by U.S. Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration Senior Special Agent Philip Galván.
The insurance company reported it never received the check in the mail as expected, the document says.
Bank Hopping
On Jan. 9, 2023, Bouk walked into a Blue Federal Credit Union branch in Cheyenne and opened an account in a business name that closely resembled the name of the insurance company, wrote Galván.
“To add legitimacy to this fraudulent transaction, Bouk provided fabricated business records that purported to show that he operated a legitimate insurance company in Casper, Wyoming,” the agent added.
Bouk went into a second Blue branch in Cheyenne that same day and deposited into the business account he’d just opened a counterfeit check, containing nearly identical information to the half-million-dollar check, the document says.
He withdrew $20,000 in cash at that time, then went to another Blue branch in Cheyenne and withdrew another $7,000 in cash as the business day closed, wrote Galván.
Wanted To ‘Hit’ Other Branches
At that point, the agent added, Blue detected the fraud and stopped all further payment from that check.
Bouk wrote checks from the newly opened business account to “Spring Flowers and Plants Inc.” for $2,425, $28,400, $10,000, and $248,000, reportedly.
Galván wrote that those checks were then deposited into a PNC Bank account under the name Spring Flowers and Plant Inc. on Jan. 20-25, 2023.
The Florida Secretary of State’s Office lists McDougal as the incorporator and president of that business, the affidavit notes.
“Bank records reveal the PNC account in the name of Spring Flowers and Plants Inc. is controlled solely by McDougal,” added Galván.
Galván arrested Bouk in October 2023 at his place of work: a bagel shop McDougal’s family owns.
Bouk had two cellphones on him, of which a search revealed that McDougal was discussing the Wyoming bank maneuvers with Bouk, the document alleges.
At one point, McDougal suggested they should “hit” other branches in Wyoming and Colorado before Blue closed for the day, the affidavit says.
“It is believed that McDougal was in Florida at the time of these messages,” wrote Galván.
The Spring Flowers and Plants Inc. debit card was active in those days at an Orlando, Florida, airport, then at a Denver fast-food restaurant, “Suggesting McDougal flew to Denver to meet with Bouk on January 10, 2023,” wrote Galván.
The men flew on the same Southwest flight from Denver to Orlando on Jan. 20, 2023, the affidavit says.
Clair McFarland can be reached at clair@cowboystatedaily.com.





