Sunday, June 9, 2024

Attorney General James Warns New Yorkers of Online Romance Scams


New York Attorney General Letitia James issued a consumer alert warning New Yorkers about increasingly common online scams in which fraudsters use dating apps, social media, and unsolicited text messages to befriend their victims and then convince them to make fraudulent investments. These online romance scams are also known as “pig butchering” – which is language scammers use to describe “fattening up” victims by gaining their trust before finally taking their money. The Office of the Attorney General (OAG) is encouraging New Yorkers to take steps to protect themselves from these schemes and to report these scams to the involved dating or social media app and to law enforcement.  

“New Yorkers hoping to find romance and personal connections online are instead being taken advantage of and victimized by heartless scammers,” said Attorney General James. “Sophisticated fraudsters are increasingly using dating apps and social media to trick users into bogus investment schemes. The personal and sometimes romantic nature of these scams can often leave their victims feeling ashamed and isolated. New Yorkers who fall victim to these frauds should know they are not alone. I encourage anyone who believes they may have been a victim of an online romance scam to contact my office.” 

Pig butchering schemes typically target victims online via dating websites and apps, social media, and unsolicited text messages. After a virtual meeting between the victim and scammer, the conversation generally transitions over to an encrypted chat platform such as WhatsApp or WeChat that can shield the scammer’s identity from law enforcement. 

The scammers typically spend a substantial amount of time making victims believe that they are in a romantic or otherwise close personal relationship. After the personal connection is made, the scammer shifts the conversation to trading or investment opportunities. Scammers will send screenshots of their own purported high balances on trading platforms or websites, as well as pictures of their supposedly luxurious lifestyles, to reinforce the appearance that they are highly successful investment experts. Once a victim places enough trust in the scammer, the scammer introduces the victim to an investment opportunity, often in cryptocurrency or foreign currencies. Scammers may even refer the victim to what appears to be a legitimate website by slightly misspelling the name of a familiar institution. From there, victims are led to believe that they are making incredible returns with the help and expertise of the knowledgeable scammer. 

Throughout the scam, victims typically see their account balances increase on purported online statements or investment platforms. In turn, the victims place more trust in the scammers and invest more of their funds. After the victims have deposited substantial sums of money into the scammer’s platform, ranging from tens of thousands to over a million dollars, they will be unable to withdraw their funds or will be asked to prepay fake withdrawal fees or taxes with the promise that their investment gains will be released. Eventually, the scammers will cut off contact.

Attorney General James recommends that New Yorkers take basic steps to avoid becoming the victim of a romance scam or other online fraud scheme. These include: 

  • In general, do not wire money, send cryptocurrency, or give cash to people you don’t know and haven’t vetted because these transactions are irreversible.
  • Research the person’s photo and profile using online searches to see if the image, name, or details have been used elsewhere. Keep in mind that scammers may be using stolen identities to create profiles that appear to be real, and their profiles, IDs, and photographs could be generated using AI. 
  • Be suspicious of individuals you encounter online who: 
    • Change their phone number throughout the “relationship” and/or tell you to delete the conversations. 
    • Promise to meet in person or by video call, but always come up with an excuse about why they cannot. 
    • Move conversations from text or email to WhatsApp or another encrypted platform. 
    • Attempt to isolate you from friends or family by advising you to keep the relationship or the investment opportunity they are offering a secret.
    • Ask you for detailed personal financial information or explicit or private photographs, which could later be used to extort you. 
    • Pressure you to withdraw from retirement accounts (even at a penalty), to borrow money from friends/relatives, or to apply for loans from a bank. 
  • Never rush into any investment. Be skeptical if the individual insists that you must invest money within a very short time frame, claiming you will lose out on the opportunity. 
  • Before investing, consult a trusted legal professional or financial advisor who can advise you if the investment is proper. You can check investment professional registration at FINRA’s BrokerCheck. 
  • Trust your instincts and think twice before investing. If it seems too good to be true, it probably is. 
  • If you suspect fraud, report the individual to the dating or social media app and to law enforcement. Save all communications so that you can provide them to law enforcement if needed. 

Attorney General James encourages anyone who may have been a victim of this type of scam to report it to OAG by filing a complaint online or calling 1-800-771-7755. Any identifying information provided to OAG will be protected according to law and policies on the safeguarding of identifying information. 

Comptroller Lander Proposes Charter Revisions to Better Manage New York City’s Finances

 

Lander calls on Charter Revision Commission to demonstrate its independence & seriousness by adopting provisions to strengthen the City’s fiscal management, build reserves, achieve long-term efficiencies, overhaul capital planning, and pay vendors on time

New York City Comptroller Brad Lander proposed a comprehensive set of enhancements to New York City’s fiscal framework to solidify New York City’s financial foundation for the future. Five decades after adopting the Financial Emergency Act (FEA) during the City’s fiscal crisis of 1975, Comptroller Lander’s proposals build upon the FEA’s core provisions for both the City’s operating and capital budgets. The proposals presented in Comptroller office’s latest report, A Stronger Fiscal Framework for New York City, could be codified through amendment of the New York City Charter. Lander called on the hastily-appointed Charter Revision Commission empaneled by Mayor Adams to place them on the ballot this fall.  

“There is good reason to doubt Mayor Adams’ motives for appointing the Charter Revision Commission, but there’s no doubt that our City needs better management—including better fiscal stewardship,” said Comptroller Brad Lander. “If the Charter Revision Commission wants to demonstrate that it is independent and serious, here are five constructive proposals to improve the way our City is run. Fifty years after the City’s fiscal crisis, it’s past time to ensure that we accumulate sufficient reserves for times of economic recession, run City agencies more efficiently while avoiding cuts to vital services, maintain the affordability of the City’s debt, and overhaul our capital planning to better face the future in an era of aging infrastructure and climate crisis. This is also a critical opportunity to start paying our vendors on time – including our nonprofit human service providers and MWBEs – something we have failed to do for many years.”  

New York City has the largest municipal budget in the country by far, with an annual operating budget of more than $110 billion, a capital budget with $88.1 billion in expected commitments, and debt issuers projected to borrow $70.6 billion over this and the next four fiscal years.  

In 1975, following the near bankruptcy of the City during its worst fiscal crisis caused by a combination of shifts in the global economy and the City’s own weak financial practices, the FEA established a framework that guided the City out of its fiscal crisis and put in place strong practices that credit rating and oversight agencies consistently praise. Nearly fifty years later, the City should reflect on the FEA framework (the emergency elements of which largely expired in 2008) and how it can be improved. Comptroller Lander’s proposals to better manage the City’s finances, which build on the FEA’s core provisions, include:

1. Adopt a policy to govern the target size, deposits, and withdrawals from the City’s rainy-day fund. Although voters established the rainy-day fund in 2019, there are no policies to govern its target size or deposits. As a result, the deposits into the fund are subject to the vicissitudes of annual budget negotiations, are far below what the City would need to get through a recession, and could be rapidly depleted by the mayor outside the context of a genuine economic downturn. The City Charter (Chapter 58, Section 1528) should be amended to require the adoption of a formula-driven policy to determine the City’s rainy-day fund target size, deposits, and withdrawals. The Mayor, the City Comptroller, and the City Council should determine the parameters and features of the policy. Reporting on implementation of the rainy-day fund policy should be required annually to the City Comptroller, the State Comptroller, the Financial Control Board, the City’s Independent Budget Office, and the public.

2. Mandate regular efficiency reviews and long-term savings targets, including making agencies accountable for judgments and claims against the City which are their responsibility. While the FEA mandates quarterly updates of the City’s financial plan, efficiency reviews and savings plans are not a part of that process. Instead, the Mayor can propose Programs to Eliminate Gaps (PEGs) on an ad-hoc basis and are predominantly comprised of short-term savings, budget re-estimates, and personnel accrual savings. At the same time, the City’s budgets often structurally and unreasonably underestimate recurring and non-discretionary expenses. To address these weaknesses, the Charter should be amended to require and facilitate the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) to work with City agencies to set multi-year savings targets, implement efficiencies that produce recurring savings, eliminate the chronic underbudgeting of recurring and non-discretionary expenses, more accurately budget the cost of the City’s workforce, establish a regular framework for reporting on savings with oversight, and move financial responsibility for judgments and claims from central budget to agency budgets. On the same timelines, agencies could propose new programs for OMB and City Hall’s consideration, along with metrics for determining whether these programs are meeting their outcomes. These programs could then be funded with savings achieved through the efficiency planning process.

To provide the institutional framework for the achievement of these goals, the Comptroller proposes the following amendments to the City Charter: 

  • The budget process (Chapter 10) should be modified to include the formulation of annual efficiency reviews and long-term savings initiatives for City agencies. The Charter should mandate annual reporting to the City Council, the City Comptroller, and the City’s other fiscal monitors on the implementation of these efficiency measures and long-term savings initiatives, and allow fiscal oversight entities to access information that is necessary to provide independent assessments.  
  • The expense budget (Chapter 6) should be amended to require the creation within each agency’s expense budget of a unit of appropriation for judgments and claims. 

3. Require that debt service does not exceed 15 percent of City tax revenues and that the Capital Stabilization Reserve be used to ensure this target is maintained. Annual debt service (consisting of New York City General Obligation bonds, New York City Transitional Finance Authority Future Tax Secured bonds and City-related subject to appropriation debt) as a share of local tax revenue is a key measure of debt affordability. While the City’s 15 percent threshold is included in the City’s Debt Management Policy and is a widely accepted benchmark, there is currently no procedure for ensuring that the target is maintained.

The City Charter (Chapter 10, Section 258) should be amended to require that:

  • Annual debt service does not exceed 15 percent of City tax revenues in each year of the financial plan.
  • The financial plan includes a Capital Stabilization Reserve in each year of the plan in a minimum amount to be indexed over time. This reserve is already included by the Mayor in each year of the financial plan as a matter of policy.   
  • The City deploys the Capital Stabilization Reserve to pre-pay debt service in any fiscal year within the financial plan where debt service is projected to be above the 15 percent threshold.

4. Modernize the City’s approach to infrastructure assessment, capital planning and budgeting to comply with Government Finance Officers Association (GFOA) and Municipal Finance Officers’ Association (MFOA) best practices. The City’s Asset Inventory Management System (AIMS) should provide an annual condition assessment of the City’s capital infrastructure, but the AIMS report does not accurately identify the true costs of maintaining the structural integrity of the City’s major infrastructure assets. Meanwhile, the Ten-Year Capital Strategy serves more as a list of agency-generated projects than a strategic set of priorities. The City needs to modernize its capital planning and budgeting process to include better infrastructure assessments (including more effective use of technology) and a process for prioritizing long-term infrastructure investments based on clear criteria that address aging infrastructure, climate resiliency, criticality, and the cost of deferred maintenance. 

The Office of the Comptroller proposes to amend Chapter 49, Section 1110-a of the City Charter to:  

  • Explicitly state that the purpose of the infrastructure assessment is to inform the Ten-Year Capital Strategy.  
  • Require the inventory to include pertinent details about the function, location, structural dependencies, estimated useful life, and most recent condition assessment of each asset.  
  • Require that each agency conduct a realistic assessment of its capital assets based on a protocol developed by the Office of Management and Budget.   
  • Require the identification of the capital needs to be included in the Ten-Year Capital Strategy based on considerations including the level of deterioration (particularly any asset conditions that jeopardize public safety), the criticality of an asset to an agency function or mission, and federal and state requirements that may apply to certain types of assets.   
  • Require a justification for the exclusion of recommended capital needs from the Capital Commitment Plan. 

5. Mandate timeframes for each stage of the contracting process. Late registration and payment of contracts is a longstanding flaw within the City’s financial management practices. Over three-quarter of the City’s contracts with nonprofit organizations are registered late, with an average retroactivity of eight months. As a result, nonprofit human service providers, MWBEs, and other vendors struggle with cash flow and face severe financial difficulties. 

In February 2022, Mayor Adams and Comptroller Lander released an Action Memo: A Better Contract for New York: A Joint Task Force to Get Nonprofits Paid On Time. The first recommendation was to establish timeframes for each stage of the procurement and contracting process in order to hold the City and vendors accountable for the timely registration of contracts, and in turn, so that the City has the ability to pay its vendors timely. Currently, there are no mandated timeframes that govern the City’s procurement process outside of the 30-day review period that is mandated by the City Comptroller’s Office as set forth in the Charter. Over two years later, the City has yet to implement this recommendation. 

The Office of the Comptroller proposes to amend Chapter 13, Section 311 of the City Charter to require that the Procurement Policy Board set prompt contracting timelines for each step of the procurement process and report regularly on how well each contracting and oversight agency is complying with those timelines. 

In addition to the five proposals to amend the New York City Charter, the Comptroller’s fiscal framework calls for making the core features of the FEA framework permanent. The core features of the FEA framework will expire after November 15, 2037, or earlier, if outstanding bonds that contain the State Covenant from subdivision one of section 10-a of the FEA were to be refunded. State law should make several of the main features of the FEA framework permanent, including:  

  • The General Debt Service Fund, which retains the City’s property taxes upon collection and prioritizes them for payment of GO debt service and any short-term debt.  
  • The FEA provisions that were added over time to the City Charter (budget balancing, GAAP accounting, four-year planning, etc.) 
  • The fiscal monitoring functions and the annual certification of the Financial Control Board (FCB), with the addition of provisions enabling fiscal oversight entities to collaborate more effectively.

In response to Comptroller Lander’s report, numerous fiscal watchdogs voiced support for its proposals. 

“This Charter Revision Commission presents an opportunity to review and improve the rules that govern our City,” said Independent Budget Office Director Louisa Chafee. “As an independent agency with a steadfast commitment to sound fiscal management, transparency, and government accountability, the IBO welcomes the proposals shared by the Comptroller as an important contribution to this effort. IBO looks forward to participating in a robust and wide-ranging examination of ways to enhance New York City governmental functions through this Charter Revision Commission process.”   

The Comptroller plans to present this fiscal framework to the Charter Commission in the coming days. Read in full here.

Saturday, June 8, 2024

NYC Council Votes to Pass Bill That Would Provide New Yorkers with Opportunity to Expand Council Advice and Consent to 20 More Commissioners, Increasing Public Transparency of Appointment Process

 

The New York City Council voted to pass legislation that would require the advice and consent of the Council as part of the appointment process for 20 additional city agency commissioners, upon subsequent approval by voters in a citywide election. Currently, the Council already has advice and consent power for more than a dozen roles, including the Corporation Counsel, Department of Investigations (DOI) Commissioner, and Taxi and Limousine Commission (TLC) Commissioner.

The Council also voted to approve modifications to the City of Yes for Economic Opportunity citywide zoning text amendment. The Council’s modifications to 14 of the 18 proposals address concerns about the initial proposal by including limitations and safeguards, striking the right balance to expand opportunities for small businesses, create jobs, and protect neighborhoods and quality of life for all New Yorkers. The Council also secured commitments to regulate last-mile facilities, support the city’s industrial sector, and boost enforcement resources.

Additionally, the Council passed packages of legislation to address the pay disparity in the municipal workforce and to support the needs of migrants and new arrivals.

“Advice and consent is a safeguard of good government, ensuring the city’s agency leaders are qualified and their priority is the public interest,” said Speaker Adrienne Adams. “When you cut through the noise, the truth is that advice and consent is a common feature of representative democracy in cities and states across this country, including New York, and New York City is an outlier. Today’s vote to pass this legislation supports the Council’s efforts to advance transparency and is a first step in this important conversation about representative democracy that is accountable to its people, and the final decision ultimately must be made by voters.

“In our ongoing commitment to achieve pay equity for our municipal workforce, the Council is proud to pass a package of legislation to ensure our city employees, especially women of color, have equitable access to the opportunities and tools that help them advance their careers,” continued Speaker Adams. As a women-majority Council, and the most diverse in history, our goal is to make government and our entire city work for all New Yorkers.”

Increasing Transparency in Appointment Process for 20 City Agency Commissioners

Introduction 908-A, sponsored by Speaker Adrienne Adams, would require the advice and consent of the Council as part of the appointment process for 20 additional city agency commissioners, upon subsequent approval by voters in a citywide election. During this administration, the Council has approved over 35 appointments of nominees put forward by the mayor without issue. This bill takes an incremental approach to expanding advice and consent and includes guardrails to ensure the process does not delay appointments by requiring Council action within 30 days of receiving a nomination.

The commissioners of the following agencies are covered by the bill: Aging; Buildings;  Children’s Services; Citywide Administrative Services; Consumer and Worker Protection;  Cultural Affairs; Design and Construction; Environmental Protection; Finance; Health and Mental Hygiene; Homeless Services; Housing Preservation and Development; Information Technology and Telecommunications; Parks and Recreation; Sanitation; Small Business Services; Social Services; Transportation; Youth and Community Development; City Planning.

The legislation seeks to move the appointment process for commissioners out of the shadows for greater public transparency. It can ensure appointments of highly qualified commissioners, potential conflicts of interests and ethical issues are proactively resolved and provide an opportunity for appointees to demonstrate their qualifications, build working relationships of trust with stakeholders, and learn more about the range of diverse issues they will be expected to address.

Dual U.S.-Russian Citizen Pleads Guilty to Sending Weapon Components to Russia

 

A dual U.S.-Russian citizen pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the Export Control Reform Act by exporting firearm parts, components, and ammunition to Russia without the required authorization.

According to court documents, from at least July 2020 to 2023, Dimitry Timashev, 58, coordinated with an associate in Russia to send weapon parts from the United States to Russia. In exchange, the associate paid tuition for Timashev’s daughter and rent for an apartment in Ekaterinburg, Russia.

Timashev’s associate provided him with the names and addresses to which the firearm components and ammunition were sent. Before July 6, 2022, all the packages were shipped to Russia. After the Russian invasion of Ukraine in Feb. 2022, Timashev could no longer create a U.S. Postal Service label to send packages of firearm components to Russia. Instead, Timashev’s associate directed him to send the components to his relative’s apartment in Kazakhstan, from where the goods would be sent to Russia.

Timashev sent multiple packages of components to Kazakhstan, knowing they were ultimately bound for Russia. He also knew exporting the parts through Kazakhstan to Russia required a license from the Department of Commerce that he did not have. Timashev concealed the illegal exports by misrepresenting the contents of the shipments on the accompanying manifests.

Timashev pleaded guilty to conspiracy to violate the Export Control Reform Act by exporting firearm parts, components, and ammunition to Russia without the required authorization. He is scheduled to be sentenced on Nov. 8 and faces a maximum penalty of five years in prison. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.

Assistant Attorney General Matthew G. Olsen of the Justice Department’s National Security Division, U.S. Attorney Jessica D. Aber for the Eastern District of Virginia and Special Agent in Charge Derek W. Gordon of Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) Washington, D.C., made the announcement.

Homeland Security Investigations; ATF; Department of Commerce’s Bureau of Industry and Security, Office of Export Enforcement; U.S. Postal Inspection Service and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are investigating the case.

Former High School Dean Sentenced To Life Plus Five Years In Prison For 2010 Murder

 

The Defendant, the Leader of the GMG YGz Street Gang, Also Sentenced for Firearms and Narcotics Offenses

Damian Williams, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced that ISRAEL GARCIA, a/k/a “Shorty Rock,” the former leader of the Get Money Gunnaz set of the Young Gunnaz street gang (the “GMG YGz”), was sentenced to life plus five years in prison for the October 11, 2010, murder of Alfonso “Joey” McClintonGARCIA shot and killed McClinton on a residential street in the Bronx, New York, as part of a dispute over narcotics trafficking territoryFollowing a seven-day trial in July 2023 before U.S. District Judge Jed S. Rakoff, who imposed this sentence, a jury also convicted GARCIA of engaging in a conspiracy to distribute narcotics, murder while engaged in a narcotics conspiracy, murder through the use of a firearm, possessing firearms in connection with narcotics trafficking, and attempted witness tampering.

U.S. Attorney Damian Williams said: “This strong sentence reflects our unwavering commitment to holding those who take another life fully accountable for their heinous crimesIsrael Garcia, a former high school dean who could have had a positive impact on our community, will now spend the rest of his life in prison for the brutal murder of Joey McClinton, for engaging in a narcotics conspiracy, and for witness tamperingI commend the career prosecutors of this Office and our law enforcement partners for doggedly pursuing this case and for bringing justice to Joey McClinton, nearly 14 years after his death.”    

According to court filings and the evidence presented in court during trial: 

For more than a decade, the defendant controlled the sale of narcotics in the vicinity of East 184th Street and Morris Avenue in the Bronx as the leader of the GMG YGz.  As part of their narcotics operation, GMG YGz members carried firearms and engaged in back-and-forth shootings with neighboring, rival crews.  This violence resulted in, among other acts, the 2010 murder of Alfonso “Joey” McClinton (“McClinton”).  The State of New York arrested and prosecuted GMG YGz member Joseph Johnson, a/k/a “Juice,” for the killing.[1] However, Ballistics, video evidence, and eyewitness testimony revealed that there was a second shooter involved in Mr. McClinton’s murder.  GARCIA was that second shooter.  When GARCIA became concerned that Johnson might cooperate with law enforcement, GARCIA took steps to prevent Johnson from identifying GARCIA as the person with whom he committed the murder.

GARCIA, 33, of the Bronx, New York, was previously found guilty of murder in aid of racketeering, narcotics conspiracy, murder while engaged in a narcotics conspiracy, murder through the use of a firearm, use of a firearm in furtherance of a drug trafficking offense, and attempted witness tampering offenses.  Judge Rakoff imposed the following sentences on each count of conviction, with the sentences on Counts One, Two, Three, Four, and Six to run concurrently with one another, and the sentence on Count Five to run consecutively to all other sentences:

COUNT

SENTENCE

Count One: Murder in Aid of Racketeering

Life in prison

Count Two: Conspiracy to Distribute Controlled Substances

35 years in prison

Count Three: Murder While Engaged in a Narcotics Conspiracy

40 years in prison

Count Four: Murder Through the Use of a Firearm

40 years in prison

Count Five: Possession of a Firearm During and in Relation to a Drug Trafficking Crime

Five years in prison

Count Six: Attempted Witness Tampering

10 years in prison



Mr. Williams praised the investigative work of the Drug Enforcement Administration, the New York City Police Department, the Department of Homeland Security, Homeland Security Investigations, and the U.S. Marshals Service.  

This prosecution is part of an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Forces (OCDETF) operation.  OCDETF identifies, disrupts, and dismantles the highest-level criminal organizations that threaten the U.S. using a prosecutor-led, intelligence-driven, multi-agency approach.  Additional information about the OCDETF Program can be found at https://www.justice.gov/OCDETF.

This case is being handled by the Office’s Narcotics Unit.  Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jacob Gutwillig, Maggie Lynaugh, and Jonathan Bodansky, with the assistance of paralegal specialist Owen Foley, are in charge of the prosecution.

[1] Johnson was convicted at trial of second-degree murder in The People of the State of New York v. Joseph Johnson, Index Number 4311/2010.  On February 3, 2022, the verdict against Johnson was vacated.  Johnson subsequently pled guilty to manslaughter and is serving a 17-year sentence.