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Former hospital IT worker pleads guilty to 3-decade identity theft that led to his victim being jailed

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A man who previously worked as a high-level IT administrator for an Iowa hospital has been convicted in a meticulous and convoluted identity theft scheme that went on for more than three decades, eventually causing his victim’s wrongful imprisonment, authorities said.  

William Woods was homeless and living in Los Angeles in 2019, when he learned that someone was racking up debt using his name. But when he reported his concerns to the branch manager of a bank, he wound up spending nearly two years locked up, accused of identity theft himself. As he continued to insist he was Woods in a desperate effort to clear his name, he was even sent to a state mental hospital and drugged, court records show.

Finally, last week, the former hospital administrator at University of Iowa hospital, who had assumed Woods’ identity for decades, pleaded guilty to two federal charges. 

That man, 58-year-old Matthew David Keirans, who lived in Hartland, Wisconsin, was convicted of making false statements to a National Credit Union Administration insured institution and aggravated identify theft, according to an announcement by the United States Attorney’s Office for Iowa’s northern district. The charges carry a maximum sentence of up to 32 years in imprisonment, along with a $1.25 million fine and five years of mandatory supervised release after any term in prison, the office said.

Hospital Penalties
The University of Iowa Hospitals and Clinics, in Iowa City, Iowa, is pictured in this file photo taken Feb. 13, 2014.

Ryan J. Foley / AP


A sentencing date has not been set in the federal case, but Keirans spent 20 days in jail last year on related state charges in Iowa.

Meanwhile, a hearing is set for next week in California to vacate Woods’ conviction, said Venusse Dunn, a spokesperson in the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office.

Court records show the two men first met when they both worked at a hot dog cart in Albuquerque, New Mexico, in the late 1980s.

There is no record of Keirans using his own name or social security number after 1988, and he started to publicly assume the name William Woods in 1990, court documents show.

Federal prosecutors have provided no information about what precipitated the name change, said Tony Morfitt, a spokesperson for the U.S. attorney in northern Iowa. The records indicate Kierans had a rocky childhood, running away from home at 16, traveling across the country, stealing a car in San Francisco and getting arrested in Oregon, but never appearing in court.

Over the years, he married and had a child, all as Woods. He used a genealogy website to research Woods’ family history and used that information to fraudulently obtained a copy of Woods’ Kentucky birth certificate, federal prosecutors said.

Kierans used Woods’ ID to get his job at the University of Iowa Hospital in Iowa City in 2013, according to the U.S. attorney’s office. The office said he submitted false identification documents to the hospital while the hiring process was underway, including a fake I-9 form, Social Security number and date of birth, among other documents in Woods’ name. 

While he worked remotely for the hospital from his home in Wisconsin, authorities said that Keirans “was the key administrator of critical systems” within the hospital’s online infrastructure and had such seniority in the role that his access privileges were the highest they could be. News of his conviction comes amid ongoing concerns over data breaches targeting hospital systems and health care networks.


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Later, between August 2016 and May 2022, Kierans used Woods’ identity to obtain a series of loans through credit unions in the state totaling more than $200,000, prosecutors said.

Upon learning about the debt in 2019, Woods walked into a Los Angeles branch of a national bank where Kierans had maintained ongoing deposits. He said he didn’t want to pay the debt and sought to close the accounts that Keirans had opened in his name.

He provided his social security card, as well as his California ID. But the accounts had a lot of money in them, so the branch manager asked the real Woods a series of security questions. Unable to answer them, the bank called police, court records say.

Keirans, who was listed as Woods on the account, told police he didn’t give anyone in California permission to access his bank accounts. He then faxed police a series of fraudulently acquired identification documents, court records show.

Police arrested Woods and charged him with identity theft and false impersonation. They insisted that Woods was actually called Matthew Kierans, misspelling his tormentor’s name. Court documents do not explain how police linked Woods or the bank accounts to that name.

Police in Los Angeles confirmed to The Associated Press that Woods was arrested but declined to comment further.

Because Woods repeatedly disputed the identity authorities foisted upon him, a California judge found him not mentally competent to stand trial and sent him to a state mental hospital, where he received psychotropic medication.

The real Keirans called police and prosecutors periodically as the case progressed. Told at one point that the case was on hold until Woods regained mental competence, court records show that Keirans responded: “This is assuming he does.”

Woods spent 428 days in county jail and 147 days in the mental hospital before he was released after agreeing to a no-contest plea. He was ordered to pay $400 in fines and to stop using the name William Woods.

But instead of stopping, Woods continued to push to regain his identity. One issue was that California was attempting to recoup expenses from his time at the mental hospital, court records show.

Keirans complained in one email to prosecutors in Los Angeles that Woods had filed 30 disputes on his credit report and he just spent two hours “clearing all that up.” He continued: “I need some advice on what steps to take at this point.”

Undeterred, Woods reached out to the University of Iowa Hospital, where Keirans was earning more than $100,000 a year. Security there referred Woods’ complaint to University of Iowa Police.

Keirans initially insisted in an interview that the victim was “crazy” and “needed help and should be locked up,” federal prosecutors said.

But a detective tracked down the biological father listed on Woods’ birth certificate and tested the father’s DNA against Woods’ DNA. The test proved Woods was the man’s son.

When police confronted Keirans about the DNA evidence, he said: “My life is over” and “Everything is gone.”

Woods has not responded to the AP’s efforts to seek comment via a court liaison who works with victims, and the public defender’s office in Los Angeles didn’t respond to emails.

AP also called people believed to be relatives of Woods, but no one called back. One person texted back a single word: “Stop.”

The news stunned Keirans’ family and friends. Letters written to the court on his behalf described him as a good father, kind and trustworthy.

“I believe Matt’s motivation was simple: to create the family and home he did not have in his youth,” wrote his wife of 30 years, Nancy Zimmer, who described him working to help her as she earned a doctorate in theology.

Their adult son identified himself as “the son of Matthew Keirans, formerly known as William Woods — in either case, known to me as Dad.”



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China school knife attack kills at least 8, wounds 17, days after fatal car attack killed dozens

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Eight people were killed and 17 others wounded Saturday in a knife attack at a vocational school in eastern China, and the suspect — a former student — has been arrested, police said.

The attack took place in the evening at the Wuxi Vocational Institute of Arts and Technology in the city of Yixing in Jiangsu province, police in Yixing said in a statement, confirming the toll.

This was the second incident of fatal violence in China in a matter of days.

Earlier this week, a 62-year-old man killed 35 people and wounded more than 40 more when he rammed his small SUV into a crowd in the southern city of Zhuhai. The suspect was discovered in the car with a knife, with wounds to his neck thought to be self-harm injuries, according to the police.

Police said the suspect in the knife attack was a 21-year-old former student at the school who was meant to graduate this year, but failed his exams.

“He returned to the school to express his anger and commit these murders,” police said, adding that the suspect had confessed.

In Yixing, police said emergency services were fully mobilized to treat the wounded, and provide follow-up care for those affected by the attack.

Violent knife crime is not uncommon in China, where firearms are strictly controlled, but attacks with such a high death toll are relatively rare. 

In recent months, there has been a spate of other attacks.

In October in Shanghai, a man killed three people and wounded 15 others in a knife attack at a supermarket.

And the month before, a Japanese schoolboy was fatally stabbed in the southern city of Shenzhen, which borders Hong Kong.



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Oklahoma attorney general says state schools superintendent cannot mandate students watch prayer video

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The Oklahoma attorney general’s office responded after the state’s education superintendent sent an email this week to public school administrators requiring them to show students his video announcement of a new Department of Religious Freedom and Patriotism. In the video, he prays for President-elect Trump.

Ryan Walters, a Republican, announced the new office on Wednesday and on Thursday sent the email to school superintendents statewide. The new department will be within the state’s Department of Education. Walters said it would “oversee the investigation of abuses to individual religious freedom or displays of patriotism.”

“In one of the first steps of the newly created department, we are requiring all of Oklahoma schools to play the attached video to all kids that are enrolled,” according to the email. Districts were also told to send the video to all parents of students.

In the video, Walters says religious liberty has been attacked and patriotism mocked “by woke teachers unions,” then prays for the leaders of the United States after saying students do not have to join in the prayer.

Religious Freedom Office Oklahoma
Ryan Walters speaks in Oklahoma City in June 2022.

Sue Ogrocki / AP


“In particular, I pray for President Donald Trump and his team as they continue to bring about change to the country,” Walters said.

The office of state Attorney General Gentner Drummond issued a statement Friday saying Walters has no authority under state law to issue such a mandate.

“Not only is this edict unenforceable, it is contrary to parents’ rights, local control and individual free-exercise rights,” said the attorney general’s office spokesperson Phil Bacharach. 

Multiple school districts have also said they had no plans to show students the video. 

Walters, a former public school teacher elected in 2022, ran on a platform of fighting “woke ideology,” banning books from school libraries and getting rid of “radical leftists” who he claims are indoctrinating children in classrooms. He already faces two lawsuits over his June mandate that schools incorporate the Bible into lesson plans for students in grades 5 through 12. Several school districts have previously stated that they will disregard the mandate.

One of the lawsuits also notes that the initial request for proposal released by the State Department of Education to purchase the Bibles appears to have been tailored to match Bibles endorsed by now President-elect Donald Trump that sell for $59.99 each. 

Earlier this week, Walters announced he had purchased more than 500 Bibles to be used in Advanced Placement government classes. The education department that the 500 Bibles are “God Bless the USA Bibles” and were ordered Thursday for about $25,000. They will arrive “in the coming weeks,” the department said. 



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