The U.S. Attorney’s Office District of Columbia in
Washington D.C. released the below information:
WASHINGTON – Federal
indictments were unsealed today in the District of Columbia charging 19 people
with taking part in various international fraud and money laundering
conspiracies that led to more than $13 million in losses, including one scheme
in which mid-level corporate employees were tricked into wiring millions of
dollars to bank accounts under control of those in the criminal enterprise.
The charges were announced by
U.S. Attorney Channing D. Phillips; Assistant Director in Charge Andrew Vale of
the FBI’s Washington Field Office; Assistant Inspector General for
Investigations John L. Phillips of the U.S. Department of the Treasury; Special
Agent in Charge Clark E. Settles of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s
Homeland Security Investigations (ICE-HSI) Washington, D.C.; Assistant Director
Joseph Trigg of INTERPOL Washington (U.S. National Central Bureau); Director
Vaughn Ary of the Justice Department’s Office of International Affairs; Acting
Director Christian Schurman of the U.S. Department of State’s Diplomatic
Security Service (DSS), and Special Agent in Charge Brian J. Ebert, Washington
Field Office, U.S. Secret Service.
Sixteen of the 19 defendants
were arrested overnight and today in a law enforcement operation coordinated by
the FBI. Another was previously arrested, and two remain at large. The arrests
took place in New York and Los Angeles, as well as Hungary, Bulgaria, Germany,
and Israel. The arrests were conducted by more than 50 law enforcement agents.
The arrests followed a
multi-year investigative effort by federal and international law enforcement
agencies to target multimillion-dollar fraud and money laundering schemes
perpetrated by a transnational organized crime network.
“These indictments and
today’s arrests followed an international investigation into an interconnected
web of money launderers, fraudsters and individuals that aided and abetted
their criminal activities,” said U.S. Attorney Phillips. “The defendants in the
cases being unsealed today are accused of taking part in schemes in the United
States and abroad, costing victims millions of dollars. The investigation
demonstrates the importance of international cooperation amongst law
enforcement in combatting fraud and money laundering on a global basis.”
“Members of the transnational
organized crime group who carried out these schemes were sophisticated, well
connected and continually honed their techniques to exploit their victims,”
said Assistant Director in Charge Vale. “In total, they stole more than $13
million from over 170 victims, primarily in the United States. Because of the
dedication and perseverance by our law enforcement partners in the United
States and abroad, the FBI’s multi-year investigation into these schemes and
this international criminal network, has yielded the disruption or return of
more than $56 million in victim funds.”
“I would like to commend our
law enforcement partners, the FBI, HSI and our international partners for the
outstanding joint investigation that has led us to the arrests reported today,”
said Assistant Inspector General Phillips. “Treasury OIG is committed to
continuing to work with our law enforcement partners to protect the Treasury
and the nation’s financial infrastructure from Transnational criminal
organizations that attempt to exploit financial institutions and money service
businesses and their anti-money laundering programs by moving illicit funds
obtained in various scams perpetrated against businesses and citizens across
the United States and the world that use the financial infrastructure of the
United States to launder their illicit proceeds.”
A total of four indictments
were unsealed today in these alleged schemes:
Online Vehicle Fraud:
Participants in this scheme used the Internet to falsely advertise cars for
sale that they did not own, the indictment alleges. Operating out of Europe,
the participants marketed the cars on popular websites aiming to attract buyers
in the United States. They offered prices that were lower than those offered by
legitimate sellers. Prospective buyers were directed to deposit money into
fraudulently created bank accounts via wire transfers. The funds were then
immediately withdrawn and the expectant buyers never received any vehicles.
The indictment alleges that
the criminal activities took place from November 2010 until April 2013 in the
District of Columbia and elsewhere. According to the indictment, the
co-conspirators induced at least 170 victims, located primarily in the United
States, collectively to transfer at least $4 million to bank accounts controlled
by those in the conspiracy, and the co-conspirators were able to withdraw
approximately $3.2 million from the fraudulently opened accounts in the United
States.
Eight defendants have been
arrested and are charged with conspiracy to commit bank and mail fraud,
conspiracy to commit a travel act violation, and conspiracy to commit money
laundering. They include Alex Almasi, 35; Ferenc Gajdos, 33; Laszlo Hesz,, 41;
Attila Kartaly, 35; Zoltan Koszegi, 41; Alfred Kuttenberg, 34; Attila Molnar, 37,
and Gabor Pataki, 35, all of Hungary. Gajdos and Kuttenberg also are charged
with one count each of bank fraud.
Business Email Compromise
(BEC): This scheme was an outgrowth of the vehicle fraud scheme, according to
the indictment. The defendants allegedly used the Internet and primarily
U.S.-based electronic communications to target mid-sized and large companies
and impersonate executive-level employees in e-mail communications with
mid-level employees. These mid-level employees were led to believe they were
being entrusted to handle a large financial transaction, such as a “secret”
corporate acquisition, the indictment alleges. The employees were instructed to
initiate wire transfers from the company’s corporate bank accounts to bank accounts
controlled by members of the criminal enterprise. Once the funds were
transferred, the money was quickly wire transferred out of the reach of the
target corporation into accounts located in the People’s Republic of China and
elsewhere, with the funds ultimately being delivered to co-conspirators located
in Europe and elsewhere.
The indictment alleges that
this scheme took place from approximately January 2014 through March 2015. The
indictment details over $10 million in transactions involving six companies
from Germany, Spain, Finland, and Portugal.
Four defendants are charged
with conspiracy to commit wire fraud. Those arrested include: Harry Meir Mimoun
Amar aka “Harry Amar,” or “Ari Amar,” 38, a resident of Israel and a citizen of
Morocco and Israel; Sabina Selimovic, a resident of Germany and citizen of
Serbia; and Cristian Flamanzeanu aka “Christiano Flamanzeano,” 32, a resident
and citizen of Romania. A fourth defendant remains at large.
Unlicensed Money Transmitting
Network: While investigating the fraud schemes and the co-conspirators’ related
efforts to launder the fraud proceeds, law enforcement uncovered an unlicensed
money transmitting network (“hawala”) operating in the United States, Europe,
and Israel. This indictment reflects the FBI’s efforts to expose and identify
certain “hawala” co-conspirators by transmitting FBI undercover funds through
the “hawala” network in separate transactions in New York, Los Angeles, and
Washington, D.C. The activities charged in the indictment took place from June
2015 through April 2016.
Six defendants were arrested
and are charged with conspiracy to operate an unlicensed money transmitting
business. Those arrested include Ori Saadon, 53, born in Israel and a resident
of Israel; Itzhak Salama, 40, born in Israel and a resident of Los Angeles;
Golan Chkechkov, 39, born in Israel and a resident of New York, New York.;
Michael Admon, 50, born in Israel and a resident of New York, New York, and
Haviv Arazi, 27, a citizen of Israel and a resident of New York, N.Y. A sixth defendant
remains at large.
International Money
Laundering Conspiracy: This indictment alleges that Stanislav Nazarov, an
Israeli citizen, generated hundreds of thousands of dollars in proceeds from
various fraudulent schemes and engaged in international money laundering.
Nazarov was arrested and is charged with three money laundering offenses during
December 2016.
An indictment is merely a
formal charge that a defendant has committed a violation of criminal laws and
every defendant is presumed innocent until, and unless, proven guilty.
This investigation is being
conducted by the FBI’s Washington Field Office and the Office of the Inspector
General of the U.S. Department of Treasury with assistance from HSI Washington,
D.C.; the Department of Justice’s Office of International Affairs, the U.S.
Secret Service Washington Field Office, and the DSS. Assistance was provided by
the Israeli National Police; the Hungarian National Bureau of Investigation,
Rapid Response and Special Police Services; Federal Criminal Police Office of
Germany; Warsaw Metropolitan Police, and the Polish National Police, Police of
the Czech Republic; the Slovak National Police; the General Inspectorate of
Romanian Police, and Bulgaria's Ministry of Interior, Sofia Interpol, as well
as INTERPOL Washington, the U.S. National Central Bureau. The FBI Legal
Attaches in Warsaw, Tel Aviv, Budapest, Bucharest, Prague, and Berlin also
provided assistance.
This case is being prosecuted
by Assistant U.S. Attorney Diane Lucas of the Asset Forfeiture and Money
Laundering Section and Assistant U.S. Attorneys Michael J. Marando and David
Kent of the Fraud and Public Corruption Section of the U.S. Attorney’s Office
for the District of Columbia. Assistance was provided by former Assistant U.S.
Attorneys Michael Atkinson and David Last, former Paralegal Specialists Taryn
McLaughlin and Angela Lawrence, Supervisory Paralegal Specialist Tasha Harris,
Paralegal Specialists C. Rosalind Pressley, Brittany Phillips and Christopher
Toms, and Litigation Technology Specialist Jeanie Latimore-Brown.
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