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Hoboken Officer, Wife Convicted of Stealing $187K by Filing Fraudulent Sandy Relief Application

Hoboken

Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal announced that a police officer and his wife were convicted at trial today of stealing $187,000 by filing fraudulent applications for federal relief funds related to Superstorm Sandy.

 

Officials say Nikola Lulaj, 45, of Seaside Heights, N.J., (formerly of Dumont, N.J.), who is an officer with the Hoboken Police Department, and his wife, Majlinda Lulaj, 32, were found guilty by an Ocean County jury of charges of second-degree conspiracy, second-degree theft by deception, and six counts of fourth-degree unsworn falsification. 

As a result of the verdict, Lulaj must forfeit his employment as a police officer.  The verdict followed a trial before Superior Court Judge James M. Blaney.  The defendants will be sentenced in January at a date to be determined.

 

The state presented testimony and evidence at trial that Nikola and Majlinda Lulaj filed fraudulent applications following Superstorm Sandy for FEMA assistance, a low-interest SBA disaster-relief loan, and state grants under the Homeowner Resettlement Program (RSP), the Reconstruction, Rehabilitation, Elevation and Mitigation (RREM) Program, and the Sandy Homeowner and Renter Assistance Program (SHRAP) funded by the New Jersey Department of Human Services.  As a result, they received a total of approximately $187,074 in relief funds.

 

The couple falsely claimed in their applications that a home they own on Webster Avenue in Seaside Heights, which was damaged by Superstorm Sandy, was their primary residence at the time Sandy struck. In fact, their primary residence was in Dumont, N.J.  They have since moved to the house in Seaside Heights, but at the time of the storm, it was a vacation/rental property. 

As a result of the alleged fraudulent applications, Nikola and Majlinda Lulaj received $2,820 from FEMA, $90,200 in SBA loan proceeds, a $69,054 RREM grant, a $10,000 RSP grant, and a $15,000 SHRAP grant.

 

“For a police officer to commit this type of fraud is particularly egregious, because officers take an oath to uphold the law and we rightly hold them to the highest standards,” said Attorney General Grewal. “When disaster strikes, we cannot allow dishonest applicants to divert disaster relief funds from the intended recipients – namely, those victims whose primary homes were destroyed or damaged.”

 

“We have recovered well over $2 million through these prosecutions and have delivered a strong message that should deter this type of fraud during future disaster recovery efforts,” said Director Veronica Allende of the Division of Criminal Justice. “I commend our trial team for this verdict and thank all of our law enforcement partners for their excellent work in these historic anti-fraud efforts.”

 

Second-degree charges carry a sentence of five to 10 years in state prison and a fine of up to $150,000, while fourth-degree charges carry a sentence of up to 18 months in prison and a fine of up to $10,000.

 

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