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Billion Dollar Internet Gambling Ring Busted

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The NYPD and FBI shut down a $3.3 billion Internet gambling ring, arresting 27 people and seizing $7 million in cash and assets worth $500 million, including four Manhattan condos. Police Commissioner Ray Kelly called shutting down website Playwithal.com "the largest illegal gambling operation this department has ever encountered." Here's how it worked, according to the Daily News:

Traditional bookies would give bettors a secret code to use the Internet gambling site, authorities said. Bets were taken on all kinds of sports, including football, baseball, basketball, hockey, auto racing and golf - and at the end of each week, the bookies would pay off or collect from each client.

"They laundered and stashed away millions in winnings using shell corporations and bank accounts in Central America, the Caribbean, Switzerland and Hong Kong," said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown, who led the 28-month probe.

And when people wouldn't pay up, there were "enforcers" to make sure the bettors paid up.

For the tech geeks out there, the authorities were able to make the bust when the head of the ring, James W. Giordano, went to a wedding, giving the police a chance to look at his laptop. The police were able to search his Long Island hotel room, "cloned the hard drive, then put the computer back in his room." And not realizing the police had gained access to his computer, Giordano kept using his computer, allowing the police to monitor his online activities.

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Giordano, a nationally ranked poker player, was arrested at his Florida home yesterday. Among the seized items were paintings by Peter Max and Salvador Dali, autographed photos of Mickey Mantle and Joe DiMaggio, and a 1969 victory football from the NY Jets. And one of the bookies was a scout for Washington Nationals, though Major League Baseball believes that no baseball games were affected.

And why was this national gambling ring taken down in part by the NYPD and the Queens DA's office? The Post says it's because "authorities there got wind of the operation while investigating a prescription drug resale scheme linked to the Bonanno crime family in 2005" - one of the people in the drug ring told the police about the betting ring. There is never any loyalty amongst thieves.

Photograph of the cash and goods seized from the Internet sports gambling ring by Mary Altaffer/AP

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Comments [rss]

  • Tony

    Morons...jerks.. Why don't you stop by and discuss it. I am the person who parks in two spots. Where do you park your POS?

  • #3,



    No kidding. But since it's still illegal in the US and A, I don't know why those morons didn't offshore their operations completely. 3.3 billion buys you a lot of islands out in the South Pacific, a satellite link, and a lot of f'ckn rum...

  • thank goodness the government is protecting people from doing what they want to with their money.

  • This is hilarious. I work for a company NEXT DOOR from the other company that got busted (we share the building):



    http://www.primarydevelopment.com/web/index.htm



    Those guys moved in about 7 months ago, and nobody knew much about them. Everyone drove luxury sedans or sports cars into work, and they parked in two spots. Total jerks. The office space wasn't that big, and there must have only been 10 or so people working in there.



    Can't say I feel bad that they're facing criminal proceedings...

  • Max

    Peter Max and Salvador Dali- hahahahahha

    The "art" of choice for suckers and cons.

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