2 mainland travelers arrested in Honolulu for alleged fake vaccine cards, AG says

Authored by hawaiinewsnow.com and submitted by Dictator0

HONOLULU (HawaiiNewsNow) - Authorities from the Hawaii Attorney General’s office arrested two visitors from the mainland for allegedly attempting to skirt the state’s Safe Travels program.

The AG’s office said the travelers were arrested Sunday at the Daniel K. Inouye Airport. Investigators found they were allegedly violation of the travel rules for using fake vaccination cards to come to the islands.

Investigators were following up on a tip from a community member.

Falsifying a vaccination card carries a fine of up to $5,000 and/or a term in prison for up to a year. The travelers — identified as Norbert Chung and Trevor Chung — were charged and arraigned Wednesday morning.

“Attorney General investigators are committed to ensuring all such leads are investigated and thank the community for their assistance and support,” the AG’s office said in a statement.

“Along those lines, the Department of the Attorney General will investigate and prosecute those who cheat the Safe Travels program, which was established to keep our islands safe.”

Copyright 2021 Hawaii News Now. All rights reserved.

masamunecyrus on August 14th, 2021 at 14:32 UTC »

Serious question: how do you determine a vaccine card is fake?

Mine doesn't look even remotely like any sort of official government ID. It's two dates handwritten on a piece of cardstock and is almost illegible. You wouldn't be able to tell if I wrote the dates, myself.

Edit: looks like this, but with more illegible handwriting.

digitalSkeleton on August 14th, 2021 at 14:14 UTC »

This is only because someone they knew tipped off authorities. It is like drug smuggling: for every shipment you catch there are a hundred others that made it through undetected.

galactic_punt on August 14th, 2021 at 13:17 UTC »

Haha, one of the guys arrested is named Norbert. All I can hear is Angry Beavers.