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    More than 100 charged in massive NYC theft ring

    NEW YORK (AP) — Bank tellers, restaurant workers and other service employees in New York lifted credit card data from residents and foreign tourists as part of an identity theft ring that stretched to China, Europe and the Middle East and victimized thousands, authorities said Friday.

    In total, 111 people were charged and 86 are in custody; the others are still being sought. Five separate criminal enterprises operating out of Queens were dismantled. They were hit with hundreds of charges, said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown, calling it the largest fraud case he'd ever seen in his two decades in office.

    "These weren't holdups at gunpoint, but the impact on victims was the same," Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said. "They were robbed."

    The enterprise had been operating since at least 2010 and included at least one bank and restaurants, mostly in Queens. Authorities say the graft operated like this:

    At least three bank workers, retail employees and restaurant workers would steal credit card numbers in a process known as skimming, in which workers take information from when a card is swiped for payment and illegally sell the credit card numbers. Different members of the criminal enterprise would steal card information online.

    The numbers were then given to teams of manufacturers, who would forge Visas, MasterCards, Discover and American Express cards. Realistic identifications were made with the stolen data.

    The plastic would be given to teams of criminal "shoppers" for spending sprees at higher-end stores including Apple, Bloomingdale's and Macy's. The groups would then resell the merchandise overseas to locations in China, Europe and the Middle East.

    All told, more than $13 million was spent on iPads, iPhones, computers, watches and fancy handbags from Gucci and Louis Vuitton, authorities said. The suspects also charged pricey hotel rooms and rented private jets and fancy cars, prosecutors said.

    Detectives with language skills spent hours translating Russian, Farsi and Arabic during the investigation, Kelly said.

    Part of the problem, especially for foreign tourists in the U.S., is that, unlike overseas, credit card companies in the U.S. do not install special microchips that make skimming more difficult, said Deputy Inspector Gregory Antonsen of the NYPD's organized theft and identity theft task force. But he said the companies work with police to help fight theft.

    "The credit card companies do a good job at keeping their customers happy," he said. "So if you're a victim of a loss ... you will get your money back. They also work very diligently in partnership with us providing us information that we need to investigate these cases."

    And, Kelly said, criminals are getting more sophisticated. "Thieves have an amazing knowledge of how to use technology," he said. "The schemes and the imagination that is developing these days are really mind-boggling."

    Authorities also say the ring operated lower-rent schemes. In one example, they tried to lift what they believed to be expensive electronics from a hangar at John F. Kennedy Airport, like something out of the movie "Goodfellas." They were stopped by police, and the loot turned out to be construction tools — the thieves had taken the wrong package by mistake, Antonsen said.

    Police searched several homes and seized computers, packaged electronics, and $650,000 in cash, along with several weapons.

    The charges include enterprise corruption, theft and grand larceny. Many of the accused members of the theft ring are being held on steep bail.

    1,317 comments

    • JungleBear about a month ago
      gee the most technical country in the world don't have the save guards that foreign countries do , that's sad at best criminal at worst, and banks being involved, this is real good
    • Teresa about a month ago
      Seriously? out on bail??? they will dissapear with one of their fake ID's and be gone and doing it again somewhere else and next time you might not find them, the jails are too full with homeless needing dental work, so let out the guys that do serious crimes out early and on bail with the money they have stolen from us... you really think you got all their money? NOOOO Im sure they saved some just in case. Im glad someones doing something but its been in vain if they get out in 2 years on good behavior. some countries would cut off their hands and we just slap them.
    • KathleenE about a month ago
      This is exactly what happened to us several years ago in Texas. We asked our bank about the chip in the credit card. Turns out the card companies don't want to switch as it is too expensive to convert all the infrastructure to process transactions. Any surprise they don't really care about us?
    • Michelle about a month ago
      This is great news @ least you caught a few of them they are plenty more in the world.My bank account was hacked twice from two different parts of Japan and I never ordered anything on the internet.
    • Rosco about a month ago
      they say that satan never sleeps, and it's true. [ the hackers]. and the best way we all can actually protect ourselves against identity theft is to go back to using cash as much as possible. forget about plastic, it only leaves a digital trail for the hackers. and also, with cash, we are more aware of what we are spending, and can watch our budget much more carefully. and now, bank of america is going to charge a five dollar monthly fee for us to spend our own money. talk about corporate greed, whoa ! and we won't ever get out of this recession if we all don't shape-up and take charge of our lives.
    • Tai-274-Wan about a month ago
      A hundred people involved in this scam. How did they get that many? Anyone would know, that many people were not going to keep a secret. If you going to do a heist like this, no more than three should do it. One or more of those hundred told someone else, and they all got caught.
    • Joe Blow about a month ago
      My picture is on my drivers license. Not on my credit card. Why is that? People are not that stupid are they? If the pic on the card does not match the shopper that there might be a little problem?
    • Ray C about a month ago
      The answer is in the article. Europe is already using microchips in credit cards.
    • Larry about a month ago
      Even more reason why restaurants should be using the wireless credit card processing machines that the server brings to your table and swipe your card right there. Look up redfin network they have the technology in place . your card never leaves your hand.
    • indianaguy about a month ago
      Once these thieves are convicted, how about publicizing their personal info such as photos, ht, wt, eye color, dob, birth date and place, SS number, you know, the works?

      Seek treble damages under RICO, and do not forget to go for income tax evasion and seize any and all assets associated with these crimes.
    • Mr. Bombastic about a month ago
      This crime is destroying people's lives! It should be treated like Armed Robbery, 20 years without chance of parole!
    • Kathy and Frank about a month ago
      Was a victim of identify theft..had to send copies dating back a year of utility bills, phone, paycheck stub to credit bureaus, and then put a fraud alert on my credit report....identify theives should be stripped down and hosed down and then taken to a deserted island to make it or break it...
    • ohnoyoudidn't about a month ago
      The penalties should be swift and extremely harsh, the result of their activities destroy people's lives.
    • Andrew about a month ago
      Credit cards companies in America don't want to spend the money to add security but rather pay debt collectors to horas you day and night
    • Schultz about a month ago
      These toads deserve to have a hand, a foot, and an eye removed and cast out into Gary, Indiana.
    • Alileo about a month ago
      First of all, the scheme's critical elements were not technological: they used bank tellers and restaurant employees. And second, why doesn't US credit card companies install security microchips if banks in other countries are using them already?
    • Rick H about a month ago
      Awesome job Law Enforcement get those creepy bad guys! Keep up the great work!
    • BOO about a month ago
      With the prevalence of Identity theft, why aren't credit companies in the U.S.A. inserting microchips on credit cards to protect their customers? I hope they throw the book at those idiots, and lock them up for a very long time!!
    • nhan about a month ago
      I was a victim, i work so hard to earn money, but they ??? just drop hammer on their heads
    • BE about a month ago
      "Many of the accused members of the theft ring are being held on steep bail."

      They will just bond out with a credit card....
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