28 ARRESTED IN NEW JERSEY ONLINE GAMBLING BUSTS
1 May 2009
Gambling ring handled more than $1 million in
illegal wagers each week, say officials
The New Jersey authorities report the arrest of 28
persons this week, accused of involvement in a
'Mafia-run' sports gambling ring that handled more than
$1 million in illegal wagers each week.
A total
of 34 people have been charged for their roles in the
ring, 28 of whom were swept up during a series of raids
across North Jersey and Westchester County that began
Tuesday, Bergen County Prosecutor John L. Molinelli
said. Detectives executed 20 search warrants that netted
$1.2 million in the raids, a report in the publication
JerseyNorth added.
Four other defendants turned
themselves in today and were brought to Superior Court
in Hackensack with the 28 who were arrested. All pleaded
not guilty to charges of promoting gambling and
conspiracy to promote gambling. Five were charged with
racketeering.
Prosecutors claim that the ring was
divided into separate bookmaking and money laundering
operations, one led by John “Blue” DeFroscia (48), a
reputed soldier in the Genovese crime family, and the
other headed by an alleged family associate, Thomas
Conforti (44). Both men ran a large network of bookies
and passed part of the profits to the Genovese crime
family hierarchy, Molinelli said.
The ring
employed a system of code names and passwords for
gamblers to place wagers on sporting events by calling
telephone numbers or visiting Web sites, he said. The
“wire room” that provided the betting lines and accepted
the wagers was located in Costa Rica in an effort to
keep the ring beyond the reach of American authorities,
Molinelli explained, without identifying specific
Websites in his briefing to the press.
Bookies in
the North Jersey area collected losses and paid winnings
to the bettors, Molinelli said. The offenders had been
under observation by investigators since last September
in a project coded "Operation Strike Out".
Molinelli said there were no instances of extortion or
violence in these operations, but he said bettors could
be in danger if they end up owing money to the bookies.
“Organized crime has a very good collection rate,”
he said. “You don’t want to be a bettor who owes money
to these individuals.”
He added that no bettors
had been arrested, but he said he hoped the sweep would
send a message.
“There are a lot of bettors out
there that tomorrow are going to read the paper ... and
are going to say, ‘You know, maybe I better really stop
this,’” he said. “That’s something that we always strive
for.”
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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