Post date: Oct 07, 2011 9:52:23 PM
Police in New York announce the biggest identity theft bust of its type in United States history.
NEW YORK CITY, NEW YORK, UNITED STATES (OCTOBER 7, 2011) NEW YORK CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT HANDOUT - Police said on Friday (October 7) they eavesdropped on thieves speaking Russian, Mandarin and Arabic to make the biggest identity theft bust of its kind in U.S. history against a $13 million U.S. dollar crime ring specializing mainly in selling Apple electronics overseas.
Authorities said "Operation Swiper" indicted 111 people from five criminal enterprises in Queens, New York, the nation's most ethnically diverse county, where 138 languages are spoken and more than half the population is foreign born.
"This is by far the largest and certainly amongst the most sophisticated identity theft credit card fraud cases any of us have ever seen. There are 111 individuals who have been indicted. There are 16 separate indictments containing, believe it or not, a total of 1,611 counts," said New York City Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly at a press conference.
A two-year investigation revealed the enterprises had ties to larger syndicates in Africa, Europe, the Middle East and eastern Asia, Kelly said. The crime rings ran nationwide shopping sprees in which "crew leaders" oversaw "shoppers" and thieves conducted their business from five-star hotels, renting luxury cars and private jets.
Police said they seized $650,000 U.S. dollars in cash, Apple computer products worth tens of thousands of dollars, $850,000 U.S. dollars worth of computer equipment stolen from the Citigroup Building in Queens, seven handguns and a truck full of electronics, computers, designer shoes, watches and identity theft equipment.
Using court-approved wiretaps on dozens of phones, police intercepted thousands of conversations and translated many of them to English from Russian, Mandarin and Arabic to gather information for the bust.
The indictments secured by the Queens District Attorney's Office laid out the mechanics of the operation
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Bosses of each crime ring received blank credit cards from suppliers in Russia, Libya, Lebanon and China.
The bosses then hired "skimmers" who posed for jobs such as waiters and retail shop workers so they could use electronic devices to steal information from customer credit cards. That information was then sent to a "manufacturer" who programed the information into the magnetic strips of blank credit cards.
The crime rings also used card printing machines to forge credit cards and state drivers licenses to match them.
Police then said "shoppers" in the crime rings would use the forged credit cards and IDs to go on weekly shopping sprees around the U.S. at retailers such as Nordstrom's, Macy's, Gucci and Best Buy and sell those items mostly to people overseas.
But by far, NYPD deputy inspector Gregory Antonsen said, thieves spent the most time buying computer products from Apple.
"This is primarily an Apple-driven case. Apple is the big ticket item, very easy to sell. For example I think they wanted a certain size of MacBook versus another one, they didn't like the bigger one, the 17 (inches), they wanted the 15," said Antonsen.
Antonsen added forged credit cards were easy for criminals to make here because U.S. credit cards are less sophisticated than those in Europe, where fraud of this magnitude would have been much more difficult.
Antonsen said authorities have lobbied U.S. credit card companies to start using chips in their cards too.
The indicted individuals are charged with crimes ranging from identity theft and forging credit cards to robbery. Police said 86 of the 111 people indicted for the crimes are currently in police custody and the remaining 25 were being sought.