Two Additional Defendants Charged With Related Offenses
Two indictments and one complaint were unsealed today in
federal court in Brooklyn variously charging 12 defendants with racketeering
conspiracy, bribery, loansharking, fraud, obstruction of justice and related
offenses. Those charged with
racketeering conspiracy were Andrew Campos, an alleged captain in the Gambino
organized crime family of La Cosa Nostra; James Ciaccia, George Campos, Vincent
Fiore and Richard Martino, alleged Gambino family soldiers; and Renato Barca,
Jr., Benito DiZenzo, Mark Kocaj, Frank Tarul and Michael Tarul, alleged Gambino
family associates. The charges relate to
the defendants’ criminal activities throughout the New York metropolitan area
since February 2013.
Eleven defendants were arrested this morning and are
scheduled to be arraigned this afternoon before United States Magistrate Judge
Ramon E. Reyes, Jr. One defendant is a
fugitive.
Richard P. Donoghue, United States Attorney for the Eastern
District of New York; William F. Sweeney, Jr., Assistant Director-in-Charge,
Federal Bureau of Investigation, New York Field Office (FBI); Jonathan D.
Larsen, Special Agent-in-Charge, Internal Revenue Service Criminal
Investigation (IRS-CI); and Dermot F. Shea, Commissioner, New York City Police
Department (NYPD), announced the charges.
“The outstanding investigative work by this Office’s
prosecutors and our law enforcement partners uncovered a litany of crimes
allegedly committed by members and associates of the Gambino organized crime
family, who still don’t get it – handcuffs and a jail cell are waiting for
criminals who threaten violence and commit fraud, money laundering and bribery
in furtherance of their enterprise,” stated United States Attorney
Donoghue. Mr. Donoghue thanked the
Queens County District Attorney’s Office, the United States Probation
Departments for the Eastern and Southern Districts of New York and the
Waterfront Commission of New York Harbor for their assistance during the
investigation.
“The Gambino members arrested in this case ran the gamut of
criminal activity. Everything from the
usual thuggish behavior of beating people up, forcing people to take the fall
for their crimes, all the way to defrauding the federal government,” stated FBI
Assistant Director-in-Charge Sweeney.
“Several suspects even went to prison, were released, and allegedly went
right back to breaking the law. At some
point, these crime families should realize we see what they're doing, and their
actions are going to lead them right back to the same prison cells.”
“Financial gain is the primary motivation of any criminal
enterprise and these allegations are no different,” stated IRS-CI Special
Agent-in-Charge Larsen. “The criminal
investigators of IRS-Criminal Investigation specialize in unraveling such
serious charges where multiple financial frauds and extreme measures are
utilized for personal enrichment.”
“The NYPD and its law enforcement partners remain committed
to eradicating organized crime in New York City,” stated NYPD Commissioner
Shea. “Associates of the Gambino Crime
Family – or any other enterprise that seeks to enrich its members through
racketeering, bribery, loansharking and fraud – should know that investigators
will build strong cases against them, and they will be prosecuted. I commend the members of the NYPD, the FBI,
and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for their work on this case.”
As alleged in the government’s court filings and summarized
below, Andrew Campos and members of his crew used bribery, fraud and extortion
schemes to infiltrate the construction industry and earn millions of dollars in
criminal proceeds.
Honest Services Wire Fraud Bribery Schemes
Andrew Campos, Fiore, Kocaj and DiZenzo operated a carpentry
company, CWC Contracting Corp. (“CWC”), and are charged with paying bribes and
kickbacks to employees of numerous construction companies and real estate
developers. In exchange, these employees
took steps to benefit CWC, including awarding contracts and approving change
orders to add or delete from the original scope of a contract. Specifically, between approximately June 2018
and June 2019, CWC paid hundreds of thousands of dollars in bribes and
kickbacks to multiple employees of a real estate development company (described
in the indictment as “Construction Company #1”), including John Simonlacaj, the
company’s current Managing Director of Development. CWC paid the bribes in the form of hundreds
of thousands of dollars’ worth of free labor and materials used for renovations
on Simonlacaj’s residence that was paid for by a fraudulently approved change
order. As Kocaj stated, although the
work was paid for by a change order, “it should have been pro bono” because
Construction Company #1 “do[es] 50 million a year in business”, and it was
“worth it to do some of the paperwork.”
In another intercepted conversation, Fiore described the benefits
provided by Simonlacaj, “This director, John.
There’s a beautiful in there.
There’s things we can do with [Kocaj] there, he whispers what he needs
to whisper and we get things done.”
Obstruction of Justice – Martino’s Concealment of Financial
Assets
In 2005, Andrew Campos and Martino were convicted in the
Eastern District of New York for their role in a massive scheme to defraud
users of adult entertainment services.
Martino was ultimately sentenced to 108 months’ imprisonment and ordered
by the court to pay $9.1 million in forfeiture.
After his release from prison, Martino, together with Frank Tarul and
others, concealed Martino’s substantial wealth and income, falsely reporting
that Martino had limited assets and worked for Tarul’s flooring company. In reality, as revealed by court-authorized
wiretaps, Martino operated multiple companies that earned millions of dollars,
including construction work, investments in pizzerias and other business
ventures.
Loansharking and Extortion
As detailed in the government’s court filings, various
defendants used extortionate means to collect money. For example, Andrew Campos and Fiore used
threats of violence to collect at least $100,000 from one victim. In a lawfully wiretapped phone conversation
on March 13, 2019, Fiore warned the victim, “When you get punched in the face
and your teeth get knocked out . . .
you’re not going to laugh no more, okay? . . . At the end of the day, when you’re upside
down [i.e., unable to make certain payments], you deal with him,” referring to
Campos.
Kocaj and Lopez, a former professional boxer, are charged
with loansharking, including Kocaj’s recovery of tens of thousands of dollars
of a gambling debt on behalf of an Albanian organized crime figure. Kocaj bragged about his ability to violently
collect money, stating that he could send “a couple of my Albanian guys” and
have somebody “grab [a potential victim] by the f-----g neck.” Kocaj helped collect over $30,000,
threatening that if the victim did not pay, “[h]e’s going to get his head split
open. . . . These are not the guys to
f--- around with. . . . These Albanians,
you know what they’ll do.” Earlier this
morning, law enforcement officers executed a search warrant at Lopez’s home and
seized $25,000 in cash, brass knuckles and several large knives.
Retaliation Against Grand Jury Witness – Obstruction of
Justice
Andrew Campos allegedly directed that a CWC worker believed
to have testified before the grand jury be fired. Subsequently, during a lawfully recorded
conversation on November 22, 2019, Fiore directed that the CWC worker be fired
as “a personal favor to Andrew,” because the worker “could’ve pled the
Fifth.”
Additional Charged Schemes
The indictments and complaint include additional alleged
criminal schemes, including (1) laundering money by cashing checks made out to
others, purportedly for work performed in connection with CWC construction
projects; (2) fraudulently procuring cards from the United States Department of
Labor indicating completion of certain Occupational Safety and Health
Administration training courses when, in fact, the courses were never
completed; (3) defrauding the U.S. government by paying CWC employees millions
of dollars in cash without making the required payroll tax withholdings and
payments; (4) overbilling CWC clients by causing them to pay for fraudulent or
inflated work orders; and (5) evading taxes and money laundering, including by
having CWC construct Andrew Campos’s residence.
The charges in the indictments and complaint are allegations,
and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.
The government’s case is being handled by the Office’s
Organized Crime & Gangs Section.
Assistant United States Attorneys Keith D. Edelman and Kayla C. Bensing
are in charge of the prosecution, assisted by EDNY Special Agent Erik
Nesbitt. Assistant United States
Attorney Claire S. Kedeshian is handling forfeiture matters.
The Defendants:
E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 19-CR-575 (FB)
RENATO BARCA, JR. (also known as “Ronny”)
Age: 32
Bronx, New York
ANDREW CAMPOS
Age: 50
Scarsdale, New York
GEORGE CAMPOS
Age: 72
Peekskill, New York
JAMES CIACCIA
Age: 51
Bronx, New York
BENITO DIZENZO (also known as “Benny”)
Age: 53
New Rochelle, New York
VINCENT FIORE
Age: 57
Briarcliff, New York
MARK KOCAJ (also known as “Chippy”)
Age: 49
Tuckahoe, New York
RICHARD MARTINO
Age: 60
Rye, New York
JOHN SIMONLACAJ (also known as “John Si” and “Smiley”)
Age: 50
Scarsdale, New York
FRANK TARUL (also known as “Bones”)
Age: 45
Bronx, New York
MICHAEL TARUL (also known as “Perkins”)
Age: 43
Bronx, New York
E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 19-CR-577 (FB)
MARK KOCAJ (also known as “Chippy”)
Age: 49
Tuckahoe, New York
E.D.N.Y. Docket No. 19-MJ-1126
ADRIAL LOPEZ (also known as “Adriel Lopez” and “Andrew
Lopeck”)
Age: 56
Bronx, New York
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