Rap impostors in Rolls-Royce 'scam hotels and music studios'

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
A gang of thieves posed as famous rappers to scam more than $100,000 (£77,218) from luxury hotels in the US south, prosecutors say.The
group rode around in a Rolls-Royce Phantom telling hotel workers they were with entertainment firm Roc Nation, according to a complaint
filed in the US District Court in Atlanta.First they targeted the Georgian Terrace Hotel, where cast members from Gone With The Wind stayed
during the film's Atlanta premiere
The hotel was left with a $45,000 (£34,746) bill.The Hyatt Regency Atlanta was left $39,000 (£30,113) out of pocket, and two Atlanta
recording studios reported a loss of $17,000 (£13,130).Even the company that rented the Rolls-Royce to the group was scammed: A-National
Limousine said it lost almost $60,000 (46,328).The group of rap impostors are alleged to have used one credit card that was fake and another
that was stolen.Image:The Rolls-Royce Phantom like the one driven by the alleged scammers
File picBut their spree came to an end after they came up against suspicious staff at Fairfield Inn - Suites in Augusta, Georgia.The group
had booked 10 rooms in the name of Roc Nation and the rap group Wu-Tang Clan, supposedly for an artist and entourage.Hotel workers checked
with the entertainment company who said the men were not known to them.One man alleged to have been in the group - Aaron Barnes-Burpo - was
arrested as he tried to check in at the hotel.Two other men with the group told police they were homeless but had been recruited by the
fraudsters to be bodyguards.Barnes-Burpo and another man, Walker Washington, are charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and aggravated
identity theft.The real Wu-Tang Clan is an American hip-hop group formed in New York City in 1992
They are not involved in the case.