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NY Residents Among 48 Indicted in Connection with Elaborate Bank Fraud Scheme

Atlantic City

Acting Attorney General Robert Lougy announced that 48 people were indicted today on charges including first-degree racketeering in connection with an elaborate bank fraud scheme in which numerous defendants impersonated holders of legitimate business bank accounts in order to steal more than half a million dollars from the accounts, withdrawing most of the funds at casinos in Atlantic City.

The Division of Criminal Justice obtained the indictment on April 21 from an Atlantic County grand jury as a result of an investigation by the New Jersey State Police Casino Gaming Bureau.

The defendants allegedly targeted business accounts at JP Morgan Chase Bank, stealing more than $570,000 from 27 business bank accounts in two schemes carried out between February 2011 and August 2012. The State Police investigation began after bank investigators detected fraudulent activity involving funds being withdrawn by wire transfers and cash advances at Atlantic City casinos.

The investigation led to a prior indictment in 2013 charging 23 defendants in connection with the first scheme. Seven of those defendants who have remained fugitives are charged again in this superseding indictment.

The new indictment charges all 48 defendants with first-degree racketeering, which carries a sentence of 10 to 20 years in state prison, including a mandatory period of parole ineligibility equal to 85 percent of the sentence imposed.

Two alleged ringleaders in the scheme are charged: Andrew Henry, 40, of Bayside, N.Y., and Alexandria Smith, 29, of Brooklyn, N.Y. Henry faces additional charges of first-degree conspiracy, first-degree money laundering and second-degree theft by deception. Smith faces additional charges of conspiracy, money laundering and theft by deception, all in the second degree. The other 46 defendants face additional charges of third-degree conspiracy, theft and money laundering.

Two other ringleaders, Johnny Cobb, 33, of Jamaica, N.Y., and Nurlin Wright, 37, of Brooklyn, N.Y., were indicted in 2013 in connection with the first scheme. Cobb and Wright each pleaded guilty to conspiracy and racketeering charges and each man was sentenced to 15 years in prison in 2014. As leaders, Henry and Smith – along with Cobb and Wright – allegedly recruited people into the schemes, including some who impersonated owners/signers of legitimate business bank accounts and others, called “bodies,” who opened fraudulent accounts in their own names and withdrew stolen funds.

The defendants targeted business bank accounts at JP Morgan Chase Bank, stealing over $275,000 from 14 accounts between February and September 2011. Later they again targeted business accounts at JP Morgan Chase from April to August 2012, stealing over $295,000 from 13 accounts. Henry and Smith allegedly acted as leaders of the schemes – with Cobb and Wright – financing, organizing and managing the subordinate members. Henry allegedly obtained confidential identifying information on victim bank accounts and supplied money used to open the bogus bank accounts that were used in the first scheme.

The first scheme worked in the following manner. The leaders would recruit a person to open a fraudulent small business account with JP Morgan Chase Bank. This person, called “a body,” would use his or her real name and identification to open the account, which would be opened under a bogus business name. At the same time or soon after, another person – who was instructed to dress and act “corporate” and who was given fraudulent photo identification in the name of an owner/signer of a legitimate JP Morgan Chase business account – would be added on as a joint owner of the new fraudulent bank account. This person was called the “add-on.”

The add-on enabled the defendants to establish a link between the targeted bank account and the fraudulent account.

Once the accounts were linked, the leaders would transfer funds from the legitimate account to the fraudulent account by telephone or online transaction. The funds would then be withdrawn from the fraudulent account by wiring them to Atlantic City casinos for pick-up by one or more “bodies,” or the “bodies” would be transported to Atlantic City casinos with credit cards from the fraudulent accounts and would be instructed to make Global Cash Advance withdrawals of the funds. The “bodies” and “add-ons” allegedly received a smaller cut of the stolen funds for their efforts.

In the second round of thefts, between April and August 2012, the defendants again posed as account holders to gain access to legitimate business bank accounts at JP Morgan Chase, but this time they requested additional debit/credit cards on the accounts in the name of co-conspirators, which the co-conspirators used to make Global Cash Access withdrawals in Atlantic City.

The following is a complete list of the defendants charged in the April 21 indictment. Defendants marked with an asterisk were also named in the 2013 indictment stemming from this investigation.

1. Andrew Henry, 40, of Bayside, N.Y.,

2. Alexandria Smith, 29, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

3. Jan Cedeno, 32, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

4. Kendue Wyche, 25, of Astoria, N.Y.,

5. *Wayne Settle, 53, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

6. Kaseem Harris, 38, of Schenectady, N.Y.,

7. Jasmine Lane, 28, of Amityville, N.Y.,

8. Matthew Hamilton, 29, of North Amityville, N.Y.,

9. Tanasia Stokely, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

10. Jaron McEachin, 29, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

11. Darrielle Williams, 33, of Springfield Gardens, N.Y.,

12. Latesha Townsend, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

13. Herbert Odum, 35, of Mt. Vernon, N.Y.,

14. Kevin Barthelemy, 40, of New City, N.Y.,

15. Ashley Evans, 25, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

16. Janessa Spaights, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

17. Alisa Walker, 29, of Cambria Heights, N.Y.,

18. Anthony Modeste, 25, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

19. Shaquana Crump, 33, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

20. Tyquan Robinson, 25, of Ozone Park, N.Y.,

21. Stephanie Pierre, 34, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

22. Gloria Buckner, 33, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

23. Willie Petteway, 39, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

24. Tanieka Scott, 28, of Far Rockaway, N.Y.,

25. Tyrone Foster, 44, of Bronx, N.Y.,

26. Cherish Hurley, 24, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

27. Jerrell Mitchell, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

28. Hector Molina, 29, of Bronx, N.Y.,

29. Tyrone Cobb, 25, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

30. Crystal Rivera, 29, of Philadelphia, Pa.,

31. Rosa Cirino, 28, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

32. Ester Hailu, 27, of Philadelphia, Pa.,

33. Ronnell Oliver, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

34. Ty-Meek Thelwell, 28, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

35. Marvin Dumont, 31, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

36. Christopher Allard, 25, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

37. Isiah Lundy, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

38. Benjamin Pettiford, 51, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

39. Steven Herod, 27, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

40. Kareem Carter, 36, of Orangeburg, S.C.,

41. Jerrod Abney, 27, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

42. Daniel Slade, 27, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

43. *Darrell Richardson, 30, of Roanoke Rapids, N.C.,

44. *Dashawn Lynch, 33, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

45. *Zulaika Hosten, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

46. *Julius Anderson, 26, of Brooklyn, N.Y.,

47. *Esterlin Samuel, 30, of Brooklyn, N.Y., and

48. *Quanmik Wells, 26, of Cambria Heights, N.Y

In addition to Cobb and Wright, who were each sentenced to 15 years in state prison, 13 other defendants who were charged in the 2013 indictment pleaded guilty and received sentences ranging from probation to nine years in state prison.

First-degree charges carry a sentence of 10 to 20 years in state prison and a fine of up to $200,000. First-degree racketeering carries a mandatory period of parole ineligibility equal to 85 percent of the sentence imposed. First-degree money laundering carries a mandatory period of parole ineligibility equal to one-third to one-half of the sentence imposed, with the sentence to run consecutively to the sentences for any other charges. Second-degree crimes carry a sentence of five to 10 years in state prison and a fine of up to $150,000. The money laundering charges carry an enhanced fine of up to $500,000. Third-degree crimes carry a sentence of three to five years in state prison and a fine of up to $15,000.

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