Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Gear for credit-card scam found in Manchester hotel

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Gear for credit-card scam found in Manchester hotel

    Journal Inquirer, CT
    March 3 2007

    Gear for credit-card scam found in Manchester hotel
    By: Harlan Levy, Journal Inquirer
    03/03/2007

    Credit-card equipment that Manchester police seized Wednesday from a
    mall-area hotel room links four California men with the February
    theft of more than $115,000 from customers of three Rhode Island Stop
    & Shop supermarkets, according to Manchester police and federal court
    records.


    Coventry, R.I., police arrested the four on Tuesday and reported to
    Manchester police that they had found a key from the Courtyard by
    Marriott hotel on Slater Street.


    "They were registered and had rented two rooms from Tuesday through
    next Monday," Manchester Police Detective Sgt. Christopher Davis
    said. "We found their whole operation set up in one of the hotel
    rooms."

    The gear consisted of everything the men needed to create and read
    the phony number pads they are suspected of having installed in the
    supermarkets during a trip last month. Davis said police found a
    laptop computer hooked to a credit card "skimmer," which reads debit
    and credit-card information, electrical wire, circuit boards, a
    soldering iron, and electrical tape.

    The four men flew from Los Angeles to Bradley International Airport
    in Windsor Locks on Monday and rented a large sport-utility vehicle
    on Tuesday, according to an affidavit by U.S. Secret Service agent
    Craig Marech, which was quoted by the Providence Journal.

    Authorities suspect the men - Michael Stepanian, Arman Ter-Esayan,
    Gevork Baltadjian, and Arutyun Shatarevyan - have ties to an Armenian
    organized crime ring in Los Angeles, the Providence newspaper
    reported.

    The men drove from Connecticut to Coventry, R.I., where they were
    caught retrieving the phony credit- and debit-card number pads they
    had installed at check-out counters, possibly in early February, the
    paper reported.

    "They would go in at maybe 5 or 6 a.m., when there was minimal
    staffing, and they'd swap out the PIN pads and replace them with
    fraudulent ones that would record all of the credit card and
    PIN-number information," Davis said. PIN stands for "personal
    identification number."

    "Then they'd go back several days later and put the correct ones
    back," the sergeant continued. "They brought that information back to
    California, where they created counterfeit debit cards, and then they
    would go to ATMs and withdraw money."

    ATMs are the automated teller machines found at banks and elsewhere.

    Videotape evidence connects the men and others to account thefts at
    Stop & Shop stores in Providence, Cranston, and Coventry, R.I., and
    to ATM withdrawals made in California, according to a complaint filed
    in U.S. District Court in Rhode Island.

    Authorities are also investigating whether the four men may be linked
    to similar scams in Las Vegas, Miami, Atlanta, Philadelphia, and
    Richmond, Va., according to the Providence Journal.

    Glendale, Calif., police Sgt. Steve Davey, who heads the Eurasian
    Organized Crime Task Force, said that the Glendale police have twice
    arrested Stepanian on identity-theft charges, in 2004 and 1997. He
    said that Stepanian "definitely" has ties to Armenian organized
    crime, the Providence paper reported.

    Davey also said greater Los Angeles area Armenian, Russian, Hispanic,
    and Asian criminal groups are "very sophisticated and can change a
    pay-point machine" within minutes.

    "They are killing us out here with these," he said.

    Davey said that the suspects probably figured it would be easier to
    run the scam in Rhode Island.

    "I'm glad that Providence was able to get them," he said.

    The men face up to five years in prison on one of the charges they
    are facing and a mandatory two-year sentence on a second charge. They
    are scheduled to return to federal court in Rhode Island for a
    hearing Tuesday.
Working...
X