July 23, 2009 3:58 PM

Thou Shall Not Steal: Rabbis Masterminded Money Laundering Ring, Say Feds

By
Neil Katz
Topics
Daily Blotter
(AP Photo/Mel Evans)
An unidentified man is walked to a waiting bus after being taken into custody Thursday, July 23, 2009, in Newark, N.J., outside FBI offices.

NEWARK, N.J. (CBS/AP) Federal prosecutors now say 44 people have been arrested including three New Jersey mayors, two state legislators and five rabbis as part of a two-track federal investigation of public corruption and a high-volume, international money laundering conspiracy that used synagogues to clean up dirty money for fees, according to Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph J. Marra, Jr.

The Department of Justice said the busted government officials include N.J. Assemblyman Daniel Van Pelt, Hoboken Mayor Peter Cammarano III, Secaucus Mayor Dennis Elwell, Ridgefield Mayor Anthony Suarez, and Jersey City Deputy Mayor Leona Beldini.

Federal prosecutors say five highly-placed rabbis in New York and New Jersey were also arrested, including Eliahu Ben Haim, of Long Branch, N.J., Saul Kassin and Mordchai Fish of Brooklyn, N.Y., and Edmund Nahum, of Deal, N.J. Fish's brother, also a rabbi, was charged as well.

All five rabbis have been charged with money laundering of proceeds derived from criminal activity, with synagogues allegedly "cleaning up" dirty money in exchange for fees. The rabbis' case is connected to the allegedly corrupt politicians because both sets of cases relied, in part, on the same secret informant, according to investigators.

Investigators are currently searching for cash and other evidence at approximately 20 locations in New York and New Jersey, according to a Department of Justice press release. The document also says federal investigators are in the process of seizing 28 bank accounts controlled by the money laundering defendants.

The money laundering operation involved high-ranking religious figures who sometimes, but not always, worked together, to wash millions of dollars of ill gotten funds, according to the Department of Justice. Participating rabbis could take as much as a 10 percent fee for using charitable, tax exempt organizations associated with themselves or their synagogues as pass-throughs. Dirty money would go in. Clean cash would come out, and the rabbis would take their cut, according to the DOJ's press release.

In one case, investigators say Eliahu Ben Haim, the principal rabbi of Congregation Ohel Yaacob in Deal, N.J., received checks ranging from tens of thousands to $160,000. In order to handle the heavy flow of money, prosecutors say Haim farmed out the money laundering to a network of rabbis in New York and New Jersey, who would also use accounts associated with their synagogues to disguise the transactions.

(AP Photo/Bergen Record)
Photo: FBI agents escort unidentified suspects connected to a major corruption and international money laundering conspiracy probe to waiting buses Thursday morning, July 23, 2009 at the FBI's Newark, N.J. office.

The political corruption cases focus on a group of N.J. politicians, who allegedly took bribes and campaign contributions in exchange for promised favors.

The DOJ press release outlines a who's who of alleged N.J. payola.

• Peter Cammarano III, the newly elected mayor of Hoboken and an attorney, charged with accepting $25,000 in cash bribes.

• L. Harvey Smith, a New Jersey Assemblyman and recent mayoral candidate in Jersey City, charged along with an aide of taking $15,000 in bribes to help get approvals from high-level state agency officials for building projects.

• Daniel Van Pelt, a New Jersey Assemblyman, charged with accepting a $10,000 bribe.

• Dennis Elwell, mayor of Secaucus, charged with taking a $10,000 cash bribe.

• Anthony Suarez, mayor of Ridgefield and an attorney, charged with agreeing to accept a $10,000 corrupt cash payment for his legal defense fund.

• Louis Manzo, the recent unsuccessful challenger in the Jersey City mayoral election and former state Assemblyman, and his brother and political advisor Robert Manzo, both with taking $27,500 in corrupt cash payments for use in Louis Manzo's campaign.

• Leona Beldini, the Jersey City deputy mayor and a campaign treasurer, charged with taking $20,000 in conduit campaign contributions and other self-dealing in her official capacity.

Defendants in both the political corruption and money laundering investigations are scheduled to begin making appearances in a federal court in Newark Thursday afternoon.

Add a Comment
by tomandjerri July 26, 2009 7:29 AM EDT
i'm curious to know how they've acted to launder the dirty money. i wanna know about the technique they have used. please if u know contact me at tom.and.jerri@hotmail.com
i know some sofisticated technique that launderer are using, but i want to know more about this issue.
Reply to this comment
by koko98-2009 July 25, 2009 1:32 PM EDT
Pedophile priests, corrept rabbis, Tony Alamo, God must be so proud.
Reply to this comment
by NYofNY July 25, 2009 12:06 PM EDT
I love NY/NJ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FVNHv5Rdcu0
Reply to this comment
by SharonMcEachern July 23, 2009 7:20 PM EDT
So, what's new? Why are all the news media responding with shock? America's mayors keep getting arrested. Wanna get lots of money and be a criminal? Just get elected mayor in America and you're almost there. I'm sure there are some honest mayors and probably quite a few that just haven't been arrested yet.

Back in December, Ethic Soup blog wrote about the arrests of Birmingham Mayor Larry Langford, Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick and Fairbanks Mayor James C. Hayes, along with 9 other mayors who had recently been arrested:

http://www.ethicsoup.com/2008/12/birmingham-mayor-arrested-langford-joins-jailed-mayors-club.html#more

Just four months later, the blog wrote another post about the arrests of yet more mayors, including Gulport Mayor Brent Warr, Hartford Mayor Eddie Perez, Baltimore Mayor Sheila Dixon and Racine Mayor Gary Becker plus 8 other mayors of American cities:

http://www.ethicsoup.com/2009/03/americas-mayors-keep-getting-arrested-hartford-baltimore-racine.html

Today, another four months have passed and Hoboken Mayor Peter Cammarono along with Secaucus Mayor Dennis Elwell have been arrested for public corruption and involvement in an international money laundering scheme. Nothing has changed, except now they're dragging clergymen down with them. Or, maybe the rabbis grabbed the mayors.

Is it the ego and arrogance that are characteristics prevalent in those who are our elected officials? Should their sentences, if convicted, be longer because of their betrayal of the public trust? I say, 'Hell, yes!' Oh, excuse me Rabbi.
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