Travel agent charged with scamming 42 million Delta points

Steve Creedy

By Steve Creedy Sun Sep 15, 2019

A travel agent has been brought crashing back to earth after allegedly scamming Delta Air Lines for a whopping 42 million frequent flyer points worth more than $US1.75 million. The long arm of the law caught up with jet-setting Gennady Podolsky, a dual American and Ukrainian citizen who was a managing partner in Chicago-based travel agency Vega International Travel Services and charged him with wire fraud. Authorities allege Podolsky, 43, of Kiev, Ukraine, used Delta’s SkyBonus program to accrue the SkyMiles points by linking the travel agency customers to a fertility center owned and operated by a family member of Vega’s president. CHECK OUT our widest ever test of American Airlines economy. Delta’s SkyBonus program allows a company to accrue points whenever its employees travel on Delta. But an enrolled business can accrue SkyBonus points under the terms of the program only if the traveling passenger is an actual employee of that business. The Indictment from the US Attorney’s office in Northern Georgia alleges that between March 2014 and April 2015, Podolsky used an account registered in the name of the fertility center to fraudulently accrue and redeem more than 42 million SkyBonus points. Vega catered for clients of Russian and eastern European descent who were living abroad and when Podolsky booked customers on Delta, the indictment says, he linked the SkyBonus account of the fertility center with their tickets. Podolsky then caused the SkyBonus points that had been fraudulently accrued to be redeemed "by requesting, receiving, and utilizing reward certificates for free air travel and other valuable benefits". “Podolsky used his knowledge of the travel industry to take advantage of his travel agency clients,” said U.S. Attorney Byung J. “BJay” Pak.  “Through his access, he allegedly took advantage of Delta Airlines corporate frequent flyer program, illegally reaping millions of SkyBonus points worth more than $1.75 million dollars.” The FBI is investigating the case and Podolsky was indicted by a federal grand jury on September 11 ahead of his trial on 12 counts of wire fraud. “The fraudulent accumulation of frequent flyer miles in the travel industry may seem like a victimless crime, however, large corporations stand to lose significant profits”, said Chris Hacker, Special Agent in Charge of FBI Atlanta. “The FBI will do everything in its power to protect companies and to stop anyone who participates in this corrupt behavior.”  

Have questions or want to share your thoughts?

Comments

No comments yet, be the first to write one.

Latest news and reviews

View more
US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows
Airline News

US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows

Apr 2, 2026

Josh Wood
Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing
Airline News

Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing

Mar 31, 2026

Sharon Petersen
London to New York: how BA, Virgin, JetBlue, United, Delta, and Norse compare
Airline News

London to New York: how BA, Virgin, JetBlue, United, Delta, and Norse compare

Mar 30, 2026

Josh Wood
India opens its latest airport amid growing passenger demand: Noida International Airport
Airline News

India opens its latest airport amid growing passenger demand: Noida International Airport

Mar 30, 2026

Dev Lunawat

Featured articles

View more
US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows
Airline News

US aviation safety under scrutiny – what the data really shows

Apr 2, 2026

Josh Wood
World's Best Airlines for 2026 by Airline Ratings
Airline News

World's Best Airlines for 2026 by Airline Ratings

Mar 18, 2026

Airline Ratings
Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing
Airline News

Delta A330 engine fire forces emergency landing

Mar 31, 2026

Sharon Petersen
Why Air Europa's economy product should not be forgotten
Airline Ratings review

Why Air Europa's economy product should not be forgotten

Mar 25, 2026

Josh Wood