TRENTON – Attorney General Gurbir S. Grewal today announced that  the owner of a now-shuttered go-go bar in Roxbury, N.J., his wife, and seven  associates have been indicted on charges that they conspired in an elaborate  scheme in which they used stolen credit card information – and illegally  acquired gift cards – to steal more than $12 million. The defendants were  charged in an investigation called “Operation Smiles” led by the Division of  Criminal Justice and the Roxbury Police Department. 
                                    The  Division of Criminal Justice Gangs & Organized Crime Bureau yesterday obtained  a 19-count state grand jury indictment charging each of the following nine  defendants with racketeering (1st degree), conspiracy (1st  degree), and three counts of money laundering (all 1st degree). Two  of the defendants, Patel and Ferguson, were arrested this morning. The other  defendants were arrested previously. 
                                    
                                      - Kevin       Lipka, 63, of Livingston, N.J., a       retired dentist, was co-owner with his wife of the company She-Kev Inc.,       which did business as Smiles II, a strip-club bar on Route 46 West near       Route 10 in Roxbury. He allegedly led the criminal enterprise with the       help of key associates.
 
                                      - Shelly       Lipka, 62, of Livingston, N.J., is       Kevin Lipka’s wife.
 
                                      - Kevin       Bae, 30, of Edgewater, N.J., allegedly       partnered with Kevin Lipka in the scheme involving stolen credit cards and       illegally acquired gift cards. He shared a bank account with Kevin Lipka,       into which millions of dollars were transferred.
 
                                      - Eric       Olsen, 49, Roxbury, N.J., was daytime       manager of Smiles II and handled finances for the business. He allegedly       participated in the criminal enterprise, spending hours at a time       processing transactions with stolen gift cards and credit cards at the bar.
 
                                      - Peter       Vasilipous, 73, of Elizabeth, N.J., was nighttime manager of Smiles II. It is alleged that he also spent hours       at a time processing transactions with stolen gift and credit cards at the       bar.
 
                                      - Kevin       Rodriguez, 25, of Whitehall, Pa.,       allegedly brought stolen credit cards and illegally acquired gift cards to       Lipka and his associates and shared in the profits.
 
                                      - Jordan       Turner, 25, of Jamaica, N.Y.,       allegedly brought stolen credit cards and illegally acquired gift cards to       Lipka and his associates and shared in the profits.
 
                                      - Chintan       Patel, 34, of Edison, N.J.,       allegedly brought stolen credit cards and illegally acquired gift cards to       Lipka and his associates and shared in the profits.
 
                                      - Adam       Ferguson, 26, of Bronx, N.Y., allegedly brought stolen credit cards and illegally acquired gift cards to       Lipka and his associates and shared in the profits.
 
                                     
                                    “Credit card fraud of the type alleged in this case is becoming a major  source of illicit revenue for organized criminal groups in the cyber age and a costly  drain on the financial service and retail industries,” said Attorney General Grewal.  “These ring members allegedly were prolific in purchasing stolen credit card  information on the dark web, turning it into plastic, and ultimately converting  the plastic into millions of dollars in cash. I commend the members of my  office and the Roxbury Police Department who skillfully investigated this  high-tech scheme.” 
                                    “Because they are anonymous and hard to trace, gift cards are a favorite  currency of alleged con artists like Kevin Lipka and his associates, who are  charged with using them to generate millions of dollars in illicit proceeds  from stolen credit card information,” said Director Veronica Allende of the  Division of Criminal Justice. “We shut down this alleged fraudulent plastic  mill, and through the diligent work of our team of attorneys and detectives in the  Division of Criminal Justice and Roxbury Police Department, we built a strong racketeering  and money laundering case against the defendants.”  
                                    Roxbury  Police Chief Marc Palanchi thanked the Division of Criminal Justice for  assisting in the investigation: “It is  because of the cooperation and efforts of these two agencies that we were able  to build such a detailed case,” said Chief Palanchi. “I commend my officers and  all officers involved for the successful culmination of this investigation and  for dismantling such a sophisticated criminal organization. These arrests were  a direct result of good, solid police work.”  
                                    The  Roxbury Police initiated the investigation in 2015 and enlisted the Attorney  General’s Office. Most of the defendants were arrested in July 2016, when search  warrants were executed for Smiles II, Kevin Lipka’s home, his vehicle, and  other locations. Thousands of gift cards were seized as well as documents  related to the alleged schemes. The Livingston Police assisted in the arrests  and searches. 
                                    In  addition to the racketeering, money laundering and conspiracy charges, all of  the defendants, with the exception of Ferguson, face one or two counts of  receiving stolen property (2nd degree). Kevin Lipka, Bae, Rodriguez  and Turner are each charged with one or two counts of theft by deception (2nd  degree). Kevin Lipka faces an additional count of first-degree money  laundering, and he and Shelly Lipka are charged with misconduct by a corporate  official (2nd degree), two counts of filing a fraudulent tax return  (3rd degree), and two counts of failure to file a tax return (3rd  degree). Bae also is charged with failure to file a tax return (3rd  degree). Turner faces additional counts of receiving stolen property (3rd  degree) and credit card theft (4th degree), while Olsen faces a  charge of hindering prosecution (3rd degree). 
                                    The  investigation revealed that from April 2014 to July 2016, the defendants  allegedly conspired to steal over $12 million by defrauding retailers, banks,  credit card processing companies and credit card holders. The scheme involved using  stolen credit card information and fraudulently obtained gift cards. Stolen  credit card information was purchased on the “dark web” and “cloned” onto blank  plastic cards with magnetic strips using a machine that produces useable cards.  The cloned cards were printed to look like legitimate cards. They were used to buy  pre-paid gift cards issued by credit companies such as Master Card, Visa and  American Express at retail stores, including Target and Home Depot. The  defendants allegedly obtained gift cards from crews of “runners” who used the cloned  credit cards to buy gift cards at stores across the regions where they operated,  including Southeast Pennsylvania and Brooklyn, N.Y.  
                                    The  gift cards allegedly were converted to cash through phony transactions at  Smiles II, and the proceeds were divided between the individuals who supplied  the cards – including Rodriguez, Turner, Patel, Ferguson, and the other runners  – and Kevin Lipka, Bae and the other partners at Smiles II. It is alleged that  Kevin Lipka and his partners at Smiles II typically took 20 percent of the  proceeds, with 80 percent going to the individuals who supplied the gift cards.  The defendants allegedly swiped the cards through card processing devices to generate  proceeds that went into the business accounts of She-Kev Inc. In some  instances, defendants allegedly purchased liquor for Smiles II using stolen  credit cards or illegally acquired gift cards. 
                                    The  investigation further revealed that the defendants allegedly acquired gift  cards through various other criminal schemes. In one scheme, vehicles were  fraudulently offered for sale through eBay and Craigslist. Unsuspecting  purchasers would be directed to pay for the vehicle with pre-paid gift cards  from credit companies, and those gift cards also were allegedly processed  through Smiles II. The vehicles were never shipped to the victims. In other  instances, the defendants allegedly obtained gift cards through variations on  the common “grandparent” scam, in which an elderly victim is contacted by  someone posing as the grandchild or nephew of the victim and claiming to need  bail money to be released from jail. The victim would be told to pay the bail  by purchasing gift cards and providing the gift card information by phone to a  “police officer’ involved in the arrest. 
                                    It  is further alleged that Kevin Lipka and certain associates, including Bae and  Rodriguez, would fraudulently return expensive merchandise, particularly  high-end power drills, to The Home Depot that had been stolen from the retail  chain. The returns were made without a receipt for store credit. The defendants  then allegedly would sell the store credit on a website that engages in gift  card buybacks, or Kevin Lipka would use the credit for items related to the  construction of a luxury home he was building in Livingston. It is alleged that  Kevin Lipka was involved in approximately $368,000 in illegal returns to The  Home Depot. 
                                    The  investigation began when an out-of-state law enforcement agency contacted the  Roxbury Police Department with information that they had tracked gift cards  purchased with stolen credit card information to Smiles II, where they had been  processed and “cashed out.” The Roxbury Police began investigating the bar and  brought in the Division of Criminal Justice Gangs & Organized Crime Bureau. 
                                    Deputy  Attorney General Amy Sieminski presented the indictment to the state grand jury  for the Division of Criminal Justice Gangs & Organized Crime Bureau. The  case was investigated for the Roxbury Police Department by Detective Jack  Sylvester and Lt. Dean Adone. Detective Chris Schell, Detective Patrick Sole,  Lt. Brian Bruton, Detective Maria Duran, Deputy Attorney General Sieminski, and  former Deputy Attorney General Shontae Gray conducted and coordinated the  investigation for the Division of Criminal Justice Gangs & Organized Crime  Bureau, under the supervision of Bureau Chief Lauren Scarpa Yfantis. Attorney  General Grewal also thanked the Livingston Police Department, Woodbridge Police  Department, Millburn Police Department, Cumru Township (Pa.) Police Department,  Home Depot Corporate Security and Target Corporate Security for their valuable  assistance in the investigation. 
                                    In  connection with the racketeering case, the Division of Criminal Justice has placed  liens on the bar in Roxbury, two homes owned by the Lipkas in Livingston worth  a total of about $4 million, two homes owned by Kevin Lipka in Essex Fells and  Belvedere, a vehicle, and multiple bank accounts. 
                                    The first-degree charges carry a sentence of 10 to  20 years in prison and a fine of up to $200,000. The racketeering charge includes  a mandatory period of parole ineligibility equal to 85% of the sentence  imposed. The money  laundering charges include parole ineligibility equal to one-third to one-half  of the sentence imposed. They carry a fine of up to $500,000 and an added money  laundering penalty of up to $500,000. Second-degree charges carry a sentence of  five to 10 years in prison and a fine of up to $150,000, while third-degree  charges carry a sentence of three to five years in prison and a $15,000 fine.  
                                    The indictment is merely an accusation and the  defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.  
                                    The indictment was handed up to Superior Court Judge Mary  C. Jacobson in Mercer County, who assigned the case to Morris County, where the  defendants will be ordered to appear in court at a later date for arraignment.                                     
                                     
Defense  Attorneys: 
  For Kevin Lipka: Howard W. Bailey, Esq., Newark,  N.J.  
For Shelly Lipka: Julian Wilsey, Esq., Franzblau  Dratch, PC, Livingston, N.J. 
For Kevin Bae: William D. Ware, Esq., Chester, N.J. 
For Eric Olsen: Marcy McMann, Esq., Stephen S.  Weinstein, PC, Morristown, N.J. 
For Peter Vasilopoulos: Undetermined. 
For Kevin Rodriguez: Joseph Benedict Esq., Benedict and Altman, New  Brunswick, N.J.  
For Jordan Turner: Joel Harris, Esq., Morristown,  N.J. 
For Chinton Patel: Undetermined. 
For Adam Ferguson: Undetermined.  
 
Follow the New Jersey Attorney General’s Office online at Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Flicker & YouTube. The social  media links provided are for reference only. The New Jersey Attorney General’s  Office does not endorse any non-governmental websites, companies or applications. 
####  |