A wealthy west-metro couple who fled welfare fraud charges in Minnesota were arrested Monday in Florida after being tracked down in the Bahamas.
Andrea Lynne Chisholm, 54, and Colin A.J. Chisholm III, 62, portrayed themselves to neighbors and business associates as Scottish royalty and to aid workers as paupers, authorities say.
They were charged in March with making $167,420 in fraudulent medical and food-stamp claims in Florida and Minnesota from 2005 to 2012, a time when they had several million dollars in bank accounts, owned a $1.2 million yacht and ran a Cavalier King Charles Spaniel pedigree breeding business that produced an award-winning dog at the Westminster dog show.
The two had been the subject of an exhaustive search that ranged from the $1.6 million home they rented on Lake Minnetonka to far-flung warmer destinations that authorities suspected they had fled to. Last week, Minnesota authorities shared their investigative findings with the Miami FBI office and other federal agencies, and Florida ports were alerted to be on the watch for the Chisholms.
On Monday, the two were visited by police in Freeport, on Grand Bahama Island, and told that their visas had expired. Officers escorted the couple, their young son and their dog onto a ship bound for Port Everglades, Fla., where they were arrested.
The Chisholms' son and dog were turned over to family members.
They are being held without bond in the Broward County jail in Florida and will appear in extradition court Wednesday, where they will reveal whether they'll voluntarily return to Minnesota to face charges or fight extradition.
Hennepin County Attorney Mike Freeman declined to comment Tuesday about the case, in contrast to the outrage he expressed during a March news conference announcing the charges against them in which he called them "rich folks ripping off the system" and referred to them as "Lord" and "Lady."