Queens gambling bust

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Wiseguy
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Queens gambling bust

Post by Wiseguy »

Nista was involved in the 2009 New Jersey gambling bust that included Genovese soldier John "Blue" DeFroscia and 30 others.


Release # 68-2016
http://www.queensda.org
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RICHARD A. BROWN
DISTRICT ATTORNEY
QUEENS COUNTY
125-01 QUEENS BOULEVARD
KEW GARDENS, NEW YORK 11415-1568
718-286-6000

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: QDA (718-286-6315)
TUESDAY, APRIL 5, 2016 NYPD (646-610-6700)

QUEENS GRAND JURY INDICTS EIGHT - - INCLUDING PROFESSIONAL POKER PLAYER - - FOR OPERATING MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR ILLEGAL SPORTS BETTING RING

Defendants Arrested In New York And Las Vegas;
Face Up To 25 Years In Prison On Enterprise Corruption Charges

Queens District Attorney Richard A. Brown, joined byNew York City Police Commissioner William J. Bratton, today announced that a Queens County grand jury has indicted eight individuals – including professional poker player Jay “Ghost” Sharon – on charges of operating a highly sophisticated illegal sports gambling enterprise located in Queens Countyand elsewhere that utilized gambling websites and toll-free numbers. The enterprise is alleged to have annually booked more than $3.5 million in bets and operated in New York and Las Vegas.

The defendants are variously charged in an 85-count indictment with enterprise corruption - a violation of New York State’s Organized Crime Control Act – as well as money laundering, promoting gambling and conspiracy. The defendants are now in custody in New York and Las Vegas, and are awaiting arraignment in Queens County Supreme Court. If convicted, the defendants each face up to 25 years in prison.

District Attorney Brown said, “Individuals involved in such traditional criminal enterprises as bookmaking and gambling have attempted to use the anonymity of the Internet to hide their illegal activities. Over the last few years – working with our law enforcement colleagues – we have taken down a number of these operations and put them out of business. These cases, I believe, have
put a significant dent in illegal gambling nationwide – and have saved individuals across the country millions of dollars in gambling losses.”

NYPD Commissioner Bratton said, “Across the country, this group operated an illegal sports betting ring with impunity. Today, the house won with the arrest of eight defendants in and around Queens.”

District Attorney Brown said that the investigation leading to today’s arrests began in December 2014 when the NYPD’s Organized Crime Investigation Division, in conjunction with the Queens County District Attorney’s Office’s Organized Crime and Rackets Bureau, developed
information about a betting ring operating in Queens County and elsewhere. The investigation included physical surveillance, intelligence information and court-authorized electronic eavesdropping that intercepted thousands of hours of allegedly incriminating conversations.

The District Attorney identified the alleged boss of the gambling operation as Jay Sharon who is accused of acting as the bookmaker who controlled and oversaw the entire operation and profited from each criminal pursuit by the other defendants. Jonathan Cianciotto and Joshua Handler are alleged to have been Sharon’s master-agents who managed the agents and collected the winnings from the agents. Emilio Testa, Christopher Hansen and Frank Nista are alleged to have been agents
of the enterprise and Vincent Zaccario and Gary Schreiber are alleged to have been sub-agents.

District Attorney Brown said that, according to the indictment, the defendants conspired to make money illegally through the operation of unlawful gambling that accepted bets on sporting events through wire rooms located either off-shore or in places where gambling on sports is legal. Bettors would place wagers by logging onto an Internet website or calling a toll-free number.

It is additionally alleged that, as bookmaker of the enterprise, Sharon decided on wager limits, approved new accounts and all money collected eventually funneled up to him. Sharon allegedly met with his master-agents, Cianciotto and Handler, on a regular basis, to either receive money for the bettors’ losses or to payout money (“settle up”) for the bettors’ winnings. Testa, Nista and Hansen’s alleged role in the enterprise was as agents whose job was to build a clientele of bettors who would regularly bet with the enterprise and who shared in the profits of their players’ losses each week or settled up with the bettors. It is alleged that the agents basically operated by placing bets with the wire room and facilitating the online betting by their clients on the illegal gambling website by using pre-arranged codes and passwords. Zaccario and Schreiber allegedly worked as sub-agents who, having clientele of their own, reported and paid money to an agent.

Finally, it is alleged that Sharon, Cianciotto, Hansen and Testa knowingly laundered money by transporting large sums of money in Queens and elsewhere in New York to pay and collect on gambling wagers.

In addition to the arrests, court-authorized search warrants were executed at ten locations in Queens and Nassau Counties. At present, gambling records and gambling paraphernalia and more than $ 93,000 in cash has been seized by the New York City Police Department.

The investigation was conducted by NYPD Detectives Patrick Fogarty (lead detective), Charles Walsh, Scott Signorelli and JeremyNatal, of Major Investigations; Sergeant RayAlmodovar and Jerry Garcia, Major Investigations Supervisors; Lieutenant Christopher Fasano, Commanding Officer of the Business Integrity Commission; Lieutenant Keith Loughran, Commanding Officer of the Major Investigations Section, Teams 2 and 4; Captain John A. Dusanenko, Commanding Officer
of the Major Investigations Section; Inspector John M. Denesopolis, Jr., Commanding Officer of the Criminal Enterprise Investigations and under the overall supervision of Assistant Chief Brian McCarthy, Commanding Officer of the Criminal Enterprise Division, Chief of Detectives Robert K. Boyce and Police Commissioner William J. Bratton. Also assisting in the investigation were Detective William McCabe, of the Asset Forfeiture Unit, and Detectives Katherine Jackson and Andrew Viola, of the Technical Assistance and Response Unit.

For the Waterfront Commission Detective Ralph Grasso, Sergeant William Kiely, Brooklyn Field Officer, Captain Jeffrey Heinssen, Commanding Officer of the Brooklyn Field Office, Chief Constantine Miniotis and Executive Director Walter Arsenault under the overall supervision of Commissioner Ronald Goldstock.

For the Queens District Attorney’s Office, the investigation was conducted by Detective Joseph Diehl under the supervision of Sergeant Alan S. Schwartz, and the overall supervision of Deputy Chief Investigator Robert J. Burke and Chief Investigator Franco Russo.

District AttorneyBrown thanked the Office of United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York Robert L. Capers; Special Agent Jennifer McInerney, of the United States Postal Service Office of the Inspector General; Intelligent Analyst Gainsworth Scott, of the Office of the NY High Intensity Financial Crime Area; Homeland Security Investigations(El Dorado Task Force),
Investigator William Gillespie, of the Office of Nassau County District Attorney Madeline Singas; Supervisor Creighton Felt and Special Agent Anthony Vincent, of the Nevada Gaming Control Board; and Sergeant Darren Heiner, Detectives Joseph Gagliardi, Noel Roberts, Don Fieselman and Warren Gray, and Senior Analyst Troy Howe, of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department for their assistance during the investigation. Assistant District Attorneys Michelle W. Witten, Hana C. Kim and Bradley H. Chain, of the District Attorney’s Organized Crime and Rackets Bureau, are prosecuting the case under the supervision of Assistant District Attorneys Gerard A. Brave, Bureau Chief, Catherine C. Kane and
MaryLowenburg, DeputyBureau Chiefs, and the overall supervision of Executive Assistant District Attorney for Investigations Peter A. Crusco and Deputy Executive Assistant District Attorney for Investigations Linda M. Cantoni.

It should be noted that an indictment is merely accusation and that defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.



ADDENDUM

Jay Sharon, 47, of Fresh Meadows, Queens, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, 81 counts of first-degree promoting gambling, two counts of fourth-degree money laundering and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Christopher Hansen, 43, of Glen Oaks, Queens, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, 53 counts of first-degree promoting gambling, fourth-degree two counts of money laundering and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. Ifconvicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Frank Nista, 63, of Bayside, Queens, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, 22 counts of first-degree
promoting gambling and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Emilio Testa, 50, of Las Vegas, Nevada, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, eight counts of first-degree promoting gambling, fourth-degree two counts of money laundering and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Vincent Zaccario, 29, of Flushing, Queens, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, 12 counts of first-degree promoting gambling and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Jonathan Cianciotto, 40, of Garden City, Long Island, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, 71 counts of first-degree promoting gambling, two counts of fourth-degree money laundering and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Joshua Handler, 27, of Levittown, Long Island, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, nine counts of first-degree promoting gambling and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.

Gary Schreiber, 56, of Flushing, Queens, is charged with one count of enterprise corruption, seven counts of first-degree promoting gambling and one count of fifth-degree conspiracy. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years in prison.
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DPG
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by DPG »

What are they looking at if they plea deal?
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SonnyBlackstein
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by SonnyBlackstein »

So Nista is Genovese.

Made or associate?

Appreciate the post IL.
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Wiseguy
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Wiseguy »

SonnyBlackstein wrote:So Nista is Genovese.

Made or associate?

Appreciate the post IL.
He was an associate in the 2009 case.
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Ivan
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Ivan »

Anyone know anything about this Emilio Testa person in Vegas?
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Pogo The Clown
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Pogo The Clown »

Ivan wrote:Anyone know anything about this Emilio Testa person in Vegas?

I'm guessing he has big brown eyes. :mrgreen:


Pogo
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Eddie mush
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Eddie mush »

25 years for gambling that's fucking insane

Rape some one get 10 years take a bet on a football game 25 years . HAHAHAHA Wat a fucked up backwards society we have become
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by DPG »

I believe the enterprise corruption charge is what is carrying all that time. Which it why i ask opinions on plea deals.
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Wiseguy
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Wiseguy »

Eddie mush wrote:25 years for gambling that's fucking insane

Rape some one get 10 years take a bet on a football game 25 years . HAHAHAHA Wat a fucked up backwards society we have become
The bookie should get the 25 years and the rapist should get life in prison or worse.

Prison sentences across the board are entirety too lenient in the US. Both in terms of how long they serve and how they serve while in prison. It makes a mockery of justice and the "justice system."
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SonnyBlackstein
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by SonnyBlackstein »

Wiseguy wrote:The bookie should get the 25 years
:roll:
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Pogo The Clown
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Pogo The Clown »

Wiseguy wrote:The bookie should get the 25 years and the rapist should get life in prison or worse.

Prison sentences across the board are entirety too lenient in the US. Both in terms of how long they serve and how they serve while in prison. It makes a mockery of justice and the "justice system."

I tell you, the idea of punishment to fit the crime doesn't work. We need unjust punishment. Hang somebody for armed robbery. Try it. We have nothing to lose.


Pogo
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SonnyBlackstein
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by SonnyBlackstein »

Unless youre the guy getting hanged.

But fuck it, why not just shoot people for breaking ANY law?

Jay walking? .... BANG!
Littering? .... BANG!

Lets whack their parents and kids as well. That'll learn em real good...

I mean if deterence is the name of the game lets not fuck around here folks....
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AG777
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by AG777 »

The ONLY time I've seen a law actually work was when California imposed the "Three Strikes Law". It changed many of the street guys around here to become productive members of society. I saw it with my own eyes. Guys who used to hustle all day were instead finding REAL daytime jobs. They didn't want to chance getting caught and have to do hard time.
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Pogo The Clown
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Pogo The Clown »

The above was actually a line from the Al Pacino movie ...and justice for all. :mrgreen:


Although I do agree with it wholeheartedly. This society coddles career criminals way too much and we have seen the results.


Pogo
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Re: Queens gambling bust

Post by Stroccos »

Wiseguy wrote:
Eddie mush wrote:25 years for gambling that's fucking insane

Rape some one get 10 years take a bet on a football game 25 years . HAHAHAHA Wat a fucked up backwards society we have become
The bookie should get the 25 years and the rapist should get life in prison or worse.

Prison sentences across the board are entirety too lenient in the US. Both in terms of how long they serve and how they serve while in prison. It makes a mockery of justice and the "justice system."
tje justice system in America is A joke and has nothing to to with lenient sentences . Let me guess You should get your hand cut off for stealing A candy bar ? 25 years for running a gambling operation you can't be serious .
"if he's such A sports wizard , whys he tending bar ?" Nicky Scarfo
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