Wednesday, March 15, 2017

A.G. Schneiderman Announces Take Down Of Massive Organized Theft Ring: “Operation Sticky Fingers”


Joint AG-NYSP Investigation Charges 12-Person Ring With Stealing Over $12 Million In High-End Electronics & Ink Cartridges From Staples, Office Depot, Best Buy In 28 States – And Reselling Merchandise On Amazon And eBay Marketplace
Operation Sticky Fingers Is One Of The Largest-Ever Busts Of A Retail Theft Ring; Crime Ring Members Face Up To 25 Years In Prison If Convicted
   Attorney General Eric T. Schneiderman today announced the indictment of 12 alleged members of a massive criminal theft and fencing ring that infiltrated New York and 27 other states across the country – marking one of the largest-ever busts of a retail theft ring. A 41-count indictment, unsealed in New York Supreme Court today, charged the 12 alleged co-conspirators with enterprise corruption, money laundering, criminal possession of stolen property and conspiracy. If convicted, each of the defendants face between 8 to 25 years behind bars.
During “Operation Sticky Fingers,” a ten-month investigation conducted by the Attorney General’s Organized Crime Task Force with support from the New York State Police, law enforcement seized more than 5,300 stolen electronics and ink cartridges from the enterprise’s alleged kingpin, Richard Rimbaugh; the enterprise’s alleged theft crew manager, George Athanasatos; and from various alleged members of the theft crews. In addition, investigators seized more than $7.7 million dollars from the defendants’ homes, financial institutions, and Amazon and PayPal merchant accounts.
Through electronic and physical surveillance, as well as analysis of financial records in conjunction with other investigative tools, the Attorney General’s investigation alleges that Rimbaugh has been directing theft crews and reselling stolen merchandise for over 20 years. The crews are charged with stealing millions of dollars in merchandise – including electronic goods and printer cartridges – from Staples, Office Depot, BestBuy, and other retailers across 28 states. Since 2012 alone, the ring has sold more than $12 million of stolen goods via Amazon and eBay internet marketplace. 
“As we allege, this brazen ring of criminals methodically stole millions from stores across 28 states – resulting in one of the largest-ever busts of a retail theft ring,” said Attorney General Schneiderman. “Retail theft is becoming increasingly organized, with crime rings preying on businesses and creating a vicious cycle that ultimately harms consumers, when the costs are passed on in the form of higher prices. But these thieves are now on notice: we won’t hesitate to pursue retail theft and prosecute these cases to the fullest extent of the law.”
State Police Superintendent George P. Beach II said, "Through this collaborative investigation, we have uncovered a highly organized, national theft operation that was responsible for stealing millions of dollars in merchandise, victimizing both retailers and the public. I want to commend the outstanding work of the State Police Special Investigation Unit and the Attorney General's Office for the hard work that led to the arrests in this case."
As alleged, Rimbaugh, known to members of the enterprise as the “General”, instructed several theft crews to steal specific printer ink cartridges, computer software, and other consumer retail electronics based on his ability to resell those stolen goods on Amazon and eBay.  Rimbaugh dictated the price that the theft crews would receive for the stolen merchandise, typically paying between 30-50% of the retail value. Rimbaugh then allegedly resold the stolen merchandise on the internet through his illegitimate business, American Media Soft, which he operated out of his Manhattan apartment. At this location, Rimbaugh received, sorted, catalogued, and shipped the stolen merchandise for resale. Rimbaugh also routinely met with theft crew members to pay them for the stolen merchandise; over the 20 years of the ring’s operation, he is accused of reinvesting approximately half of the proceeds into the criminal enterprise in the form of cash payments to the theft crews to pay for the merchandise they stole.
As further alleged, the investigation revealed that George Athanasatos, referred to by members of the enterprise as “Field Marshall,” reported directly to Rimbaugh and was the manager of three of the four theft crews that delivered stolen merchandise to Rimbaugh.  Athanasatos allegedly managed the day-to-day operations of these three theft crews and received a percentage of the total amount of money that Rimbaugh would pay the crew for their stolen merchandise. Rimbaugh and Athanasatos dispatched the three theft crews on missions to various regions across the country and remotely managed their progress during each undertaking, which took place on a weekly basis.
In addition to advising the shoplifters, Athanasatos allegedly provided the groups with coded maps detailing target retail locations, such as Staples, Office Depot, and BestBuy.  He is also accused of providing members of the theft crews with “booster” gear, such as custom-made vests known as “bazookas.” When worn underneath regular clothing, “bazookas” can conceal large amounts of merchandise while inside of the stores. When departing the stores, the crews allegedly used “kryptonite” devices to deactivate security alarms at store exits, as well as short-wave radios, which made it easier for the crews to eavesdrop on store security in order to warn one another about the presence of security or law enforcement.  Multiple anti-security devices, such as “kryptonite”, Alpha Keys, and Spider Wraps, were seized from Athanasatos’ residence during the execution of a search warrant.
Rimbaugh and Athanasatos’s alleged theft crews each consisted of two or three members, who each had specified roles: “Captain,” “Lieutenant,” or “Sergeant.”  The “Captain” served as the crew leader and was responsible for managing and directing the “Lieutenant” and the “Sergeant” while on a mission.  The crews systematically traveled across the country, at the direction of Rimbaugh and Athanasatos, who issued credit cards to the crews to cover expenses such as flights, car rentals, and hotels.
Prosecutors allege that the crews often executed a series of retail thefts on a daily basis and then shipped the stolen merchandise to Rimbaugh at his New York City apartment, where he prepared the merchandise for sale on Amazon and eBay. In fact, when the Attorney General’s office was executing its search warrant on Rimbaugh’s home, five packages of stolen merchandise arrived.
During the course of the investigation, OCTF investigators tracked the movements of the theft crews, monitored their shipments of stolen goods to Rimbaugh, and obtained numerous surveillance videos of the theft crews while stealing merchandise from retail stores across the country.
The indictment, unsealed before New York Supreme Court Justice Maxwell Wiley, charged the following individuals with enterprise corruption and other crimes in relation to their involvement in the organized retail theft and fencing enterprise. Each defendant, if convicted, faces between 8 and 25 years in prison.
Richard Rimbaugh, a/k/a “The General,” 64, Fence of the Enterprise, New York, NY
George Athanasatos, a/k/a “The Field Marshall,” 62, Manager, Brooklyn, NY                              
George Rapatsouleas, a/k/a “Skipper,” a/k/a “Nipplehead,” 31, Captain, Brooklyn, NY
Krissylee Harris, a/k/a “Princess,” 35, Lieutenant, Brooklyn, NY                                       
Nusret Srdanovic, a/k/a “Monte,” 23, Sergeant, Brooklyn, NY
Roger Ringhiser, a/k/a “Captain Rog”, 53, Captain, Long Beach, NY
Frank Albergo, 59, Lieutenant, Oviedo, FL
Kevin Cerrato, 22, Sergeant, Elmont, NY
Gregory Anastasiou, a/k/a “Captain Frank”, 38, Captain, East Stroudsburg, PA
Joseph Pooler, a/k/a “Baby Arm Johnson”, 41, Sergeant, Stroudsburg, PA
Robert Scarano, a/k/a “Reno”, 56, Captain, Las Vegas, NY
Giovanna Bonello, 28, Lieutenant, Staten Island, NY
Members of the criminal enterprise are set to be arraigned before New York Supreme Court Justice Maxwell Wiley beginning today.
This investigation also uncovered that Athanasatos was involved in an alleged welfare fraud conspiracy with Anna Candanedo, in which Athanasatos filed false documentation with the Nassau County Department of Social Services in order to facilitate Candanedo’s illicit receipt of housing benefits.  Athanasatos and Candanedo were named on a separate indictment in Nassau County for charges including forgery, possession of a forged instrument, offering a false instrument for filling, falsifying business records, larceny, welfare fraud, and conspiracy to commit those crimes. If convicted, each of the defendants faces up to 21 years behind bars. The indictment, unsealed before Nassau County Supreme Court Justice David Sullivan, charged the following individuals with the aforesaid crimes, in relation to their involvement in the welfare fraud conspiracy. The defendants are set to be arraigned before Nassau County Supreme Court Justice David Sullivan beginning today.
Anna Candanedo, 32, Elmont, NY
George Athanasatos, 62, Brooklyn, NY                              
The charges against the defendants are accusations and the defendants are presumed innocent until and unless proven guilty in a court of law.

Ridgewood Savings Bank and the Bronx Chamber of Commerce invite you to attend a Free Small Business Financial Workshop



Bronx H.I.R.E. Certification Event re-scheduled for March 23rd


STATEMENT FROM MAYOR DE BLASIO ON THE PASSAGE OF THE NYS ASSEMBLY’S ONE-HOUSE BUDGET


   "Speaker Heastie and the Assembly Democratic Conference have passed a one-house budget proposal that uplifts our fellow New Yorkers, protects the interests of New York City, and recognizes the fact that New York State succeeds when New York City succeeds and vice versa. We applaud several actions taken by the Assembly in critical areas like education, housing and homelessness. Increasing school aid and putting us back on a path to meet the Campaign for Fiscal Equity, extending mayoral control for seven years, including $500 million for critical repairs at NYCHA, keeping 25,000 seniors in their homes through enactment of our proposed mansion tax, and offering creative solutions to address homelessness with the Home Stability Support proposal are just a few examples of how the one-house budget helps New York City.  I look forward to continuing discussions with our state partners as the budget process progresses to ensure these and other City priorities are included in the enacted State budget."

EDITOR'S NOTE:

I can see now that this one house budget proposal supported by Mayor Bill de Blasio is doomed to fail. No not just because the mayor supports it while it has many very good items there are also bad ones. 
Does the mayor even know what the settlement of the CFE Lawsuit was, and just how much money not only New York City but other inner city school districts in the state were to receive as per the settlement?
The mayor has said it will take 'EIGHTEEN MILLION DOLLARS' to bring NYCHA houses up to par, but he applauds receiving only $500 Million Dollars in possible state aid which is sure to be cut by the State Senate and/or Governor.
The same goes for the Mansion Tax, and creative ways to address the HOMELESS PROBLEM in NYC. I can hear a message from a state senator upstate saying 'Why doesn't the mayor put the homeless in Gracie Mansion then'.
The best laugh of all has to be the assembly proposal to extend Mayoral Control of the public schools for seven years, when last year the state assembly proposed a three year extension and approved a one year extension of Mayoral Control. The best case scenario is for the State Senate and Governor to let Mayoral Control sunset, and come up with a real system of accountability for parents and taxpayers.

MAYOR’S OFFICE OF CRIMINAL JUSTICE, ANNOUNCE SUCCESSFUL ROLLOUT OF “JUSTICE-INVOLVED SUPPORTIVE HOUSING” PROGRAM STABILIZING INDIVIDUALS WHO FREQUENTLY CYCLE THROUGH JAIL AND SHELTER


Supportive housing projected to save $1.5 million per year in reducing jail, shelter and hospital use
Permanent supportive housing funded by asset forfeiture investment from Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus Vance Jr.’s Office
  The Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice and the Department of Health and Mental Hygiene today announced that 97 individuals in New York City who most frequently cycled through jail on low-level charges, stayed in City shelters, and struggled with behavioral health needs have been connected to permanent supportive housing through a program called “Justice-Involved Supportive Housing.” This approach has been shown to reduce returns to jail by 38 percent and to save $16,000 per individual in annual jail, shelter, and emergency room costs.  
“Housing is one of the few proven tools we have to prevent returns to jail for those who struggle with behavioral health issues and chronic homelessness,” said Elizabeth Glazer, director of the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice. “For the population with serious mental health needs who have been shuttling between jail, hospitals and shelter for years, permanent housing paired with targeted services has been shown to stop the churn. This saves money, reserves jail for people who pose a public safety risk, and helps people who have been struggling to build productive, stable and healthy lives.”
“Stable, permanent housing is one of the keys to living a healthy life,” said Health Commissioner Dr. Mary T. Bassett. “Justice-Involved Supportive Housing’s great innovation is to use data already available to City government to pre-qualify people for supportive housing. This rapid placement process, paired with intense support services, has proven people with long histories of cycling through jail and shelter can succeed in permanent housing.”

In New York City, a relatively small number of people consume a disproportionate share of shelter, jail and emergency room resources. Justice-Involved Supportive Housing aims to stabilize this small population, who: 

·         Tend to face low-level charges: 90 percent of jail admissions for this population are on misdemeanor charges;
·         Cycle through jail repeatedly for short periods of time: The 97 people placed in supportive housing to date entered the City’s custody an average of 11 times each, and spent an average of 370 days in jail over a period of four years;
·         Have significant behavioral health needs: The 97 individuals placed to date have a high incidence of serious mental illness and 97 percent report extensive substance use;
·         Struggle with homelessness: The 97 people placed in supportive housing to date averaged 240 days in shelter over the last four years; and
·         Tend to be older than the average jail population: The 97 people who have been placed to date average 47-years-old. 

Permanent supportive housing for individuals who have a history of cycling through the criminal justice system is an evidence-driven model that has been shown to lead to:
·         Fewer returns to jail, with a 40 percent reduction in days spent in jail and a 38 percent reduction in jail admissions over two years;
·         Less shelter use, with a 90 percent reduction in both shelter admissions and days in shelter over two years; and
·         Improved health outcomes, with a 55 percent reduction in days in a psychiatric hospital over two years.
While housed, program participants receive continuous support from a case manager who is able to recommend and connect tenants to crisis interventions, financial management resources, public benefits, substance use counseling and treatment, medication management, and a range of other services for daily living skills. Supportive housing providers include the Fortune Society, CAMBA, and Urban Pathways.
Manhattan District Attorney Cyrus R. Vance, Jr., said: “Far too often we see the same individuals cycling through the revolving door of our courthouses, shelters, and hospitals. Investing in a safe space for this population to live and receive treatment makes us all safer. My Office is proud to be a member of the Task Force on Behavioral Health and the Criminal Justice System, and to have provided the $9 million in funding for supportive housing citywide from my Office’s Criminal Justice Investment Initiative.”

In order to ensure that available apartments in scattered sites across the City are effectively matched to the individuals with greatest need, the Mayor’s Office of Criminal Justice used an intensive and innovative data-match process to identify 400 individuals who have had at least five admissions to City jails and five admissions to City shelters within any four-year period, and who are likely living with behavioral health issues. Eighty percent of the beds funded under this program have already been filled, and the City is actively working to connect other eligible individuals to permanent homes.  
Justice-Involved Supportive Housing is a top priority of the Mayor’s Task Force on Behavioral Health and the Criminal Justice System, a $130 million commitment to reducing the number of people with behavioral health needs cycling through the criminal justice system. Despite dramatic declines in both crime and the use of jail in New York City over the last twenty years, the percentage of the jail population with behavioral health needs stayed largely constant, comprising a larger and larger proportion of the overall jail population. Since the Task Force was launched, the jail population with behavioral health needs has fallen 5% after increasing for 20 years.

Bronx Borough President Ruben Diaz Jr. - Public Hearings: Gifted & Talented Task Force



























New York City Council Member Andy King -


  New York City Council Member Andy King, in partnership with Neighborhood Housing Service,  the Legal Aid Society and Community Board 12, will be hosting a free workshop for homeowners onWednesday, March 22, at 6:30 p.m. at Community Board 12, 4101 White Plains Road., Bronx. The workshop is geared to helping homeowners who are having difficulties meeting their mortgage payment or problems with property taxes or city liens. The workshop will also inform homeowners about predatory scams

Tuesday, March 14, 2017

U.S. Attorney Charges Registered Sexual Offender In Westchester County With Sexual Exploitation Of A Minor


   Joon H. Kim, Acting United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, and William F. Sweeney Jr., Assistant Director-in-Charge of the New York Division of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), announced the arrest and filing of charges against DAVID OHNMACHT, a 36-year-old registered sexual offender in Westchester, New York. The Amended Complaint filed yesterday in White Plains federal court charges that OHNMACHT persuaded a 14-year-old girl (“Victim-1”) to engage in sexually explicit activity, video it, and transmit it, via Instagram, to OHNMACHT. The Amended Complaint also charges that OHNMCHT engaged in that conduct while being someone required to register as a sexual offender. OHNMACHT was presented yesterday before U.S. Magistrate Judge Judith McCarthy in White Plains federal court and detained without bail.

If convicted, OHNMACHT faces a mandatory minimum sentence of 35 years in prison and a maximum sentence of 50 years in prison.

Acting U.S. Attorney Joon H. Kim said: “David Ohnmacht allegedly convinced a 14-year-old girl to send him sexually explicit videos of herself and threatened to release it to her friends if she did not send more. It is one of law enforcement’s most important missions to protect children from this type of allegedly predatory conduct.”

FBI Assistant Director William F. Sweeney Jr. said: “Our job as law enforcement is to protect people from criminals, but our job gets harder as more predators approach children and take advantage of them. Those alleged predators have more access in this digital age than they’ve ever had before, but as parents we have to be the first line of defense by talking with them and making sure they know the dangers that lurk online. The alleged subject in this case is what parents fear the most, a known sexual predator making contact with their child. Our jobs may get harder, but that won’t stop us from going after and stopping criminals from preying on our children.”

According to the Amended Complaint filed today in White Plains federal court[1]:

From November 2016 through February 2017, OHNMACHT communicated online via Instagram with a 14-year-old girl (“Victim-1”) and convinced Victim-1 to take and transmit sexually explicit videos of Victim-1 to OHNMACHT.

OHNMACHT utilized the screen names “Dannyw290” and “little.kitty.love” during his communications with Victim-1. OHNMACHT told Victim-1 that if she did not make and transmit additional videos, he would expose Victim-1’s prior videos to her friends on Instagram.

OHNMACHT was convicted on August 19, 2003, in Westchester County Court of multiple sexual abuse and sexual assault charges including Sexual Abuse in the Third Degree, Possessing an Obscene Sexual Performance by a Child less than 16 years old, Rape in the First Degree, Use of a Child less than 17 years of age in a sexual performance, Possessing a Sexual Performance by a child less than 16 years of age, Sexual Abuse in the First Degree, Promoting a Sexual Performance by a child less than 17 years of age, and Sodomy, Intercourse, Forcible Compulsion. OHNMACHT was sentenced to a term of imprisonment of 40 months to ten years. He served approximately nine years in prison and was released on or about November 1, 2011. OHNMACHT then began a five-year term of post-release supervision with New York State Parole that ended on or about November 1, 2016.

OHNMACHT’s prior convictions involved four different victims, who ranged in age from 13 to 15. As a result of his convictions, OHNMACHT was required to register with the New York State Sex Offender Registry.

OHNMACHT was arrested yesterday morning in Katonah, New York.

Mr. Kim praised the efforts of the FBI. He also thanked the FBI’s Wilmington, North Carolina, Resident Agency, the New Hanover County Sheriff’s Office in Wilmington, North Carolina, and the Bedford, New York, Police Department in connection with this investigation.

Mr. Kim stated that the investigation is ongoing. Any individuals with relevant information concerning DAVID OHNMACHT and any individuals who may have encountered someone using the user names “Dannyw290” or “little.kitty.love” should contact the FBI at (914) 925-3700.

EDITOR'S NOTE:

  This is the first posting by new Acting U. S. Attorney for the Southern District Joon H. Kim.
  Former U. S. Attorney Preet Bharara you will be missed.