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To: Knight who wrote (21663)3/4/2000 6:55:00 AM
From: Rande Is  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 57584
 
Mob Said To Infiltrate Wall Street

05:45 PM ET 03/02/00

By LARRY NEUMEISTER=
Associated Press Writer=
NEW YORK (AP) _ Russian mobsters teamed up with four Italian
organized crime families in New York to infiltrate Wall Street in a
stock scam that could have earned them more than $60 million,
authorities said Thursday.
The unusual combination of forces funneled millions of dollars
in illicit proceeds from stock sales through offshore banks before
the FBI stumbled upon documents in a storage locker that revealed
the large-scale stock fraud and money laundering plot,
investigators said.
A four-year probe culminated in an indictment unveiled Thursday
in Brooklyn. In all, 19 people were charged, including six alleged
mobsters or associates of crime families, all of them accused of
participating in the scheme between 1993 and 1996.
Some of those charged had been captured earlier in a similar
prosecution in U.S. District Court in Manhattan. That case involved
stock manipulation by small brokerage houses protected by the mob.
U.S. Attorney Loretta E. Lynch said the case ``illustrates the
continuing relationship of organized crime in the stock market.'
The mob, she said, ``sought to extend its reach into the lives
of ordinary citizens.'
She estimated the mobsters reaped at least $40 million in
illegal profits, while Lewis Schiliro, the FBI's assistant director
in charge of the New York office, said profits could easily exceed
$60 million.
He said the case proved once again that organized crime
families, closed off from traditional avenues of income through
aggressive prosecutions, sought new opportunities elsewhere.
``A recurrent theme in our investigations has been that the mob
goes where the money is,' he said.
Among those indicted in the case were a captain in the Bonanno
crime family, a soldier in the Genovese family, an associate in the
Colombo family and an associate and a soldier in the Gambino
family.
The Russian gangsters used their expertise in money laundering
and offshore bank accounts while the New York mob families lent
their skills at muscling their way to money through threats and
intimidation, Schiliro said.
Authorities refused to divulge exactly how the organized crime
families protected the scheme or if anyone was injured.
Schiliro said help from the mob was welcomed by two now-defunct
brokerage firms in downtown Manhattan _ White Rock Partners & Co.
and State Street Capital Markets Corp.
According to the indictment, top executives at the two companies
joined other brokerage firms and brokers to create fraudulent
securities schemes and then launder tens of millions of dollars of
illicit profits.
The firms allegedly acquired control of tiny companies by
quietly buying enough stock in them, then artificially boosted
their value by paying unscrupulous brokers to persuade unwitting
investors that they should buy stock in the same companies.
After the stock value rose six or seven points, the firms cashed
in by selling their secretly held shares, causing the value of the
stocks to plummet, the indictment alleged.
The profits were laundered by transferring money several times
through offshore bank accounts until it had the appearance of
having been legitimately earned.
Lynch said one company whose securities were manipulated by the
mob was essentially dormant until it became part of the scheme.
Three companies, she said, were listed on the Nasdaq Stock Market.
Schiliro said the companies who solicited help from the mob
learned over time that organized crime had become part of their
business.
``Once they're in, they're in for good,' Schiliro said.