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  • Thirteen charged in cigarette smuggling

    Newsday (New York)
    October 14, 2004 Thursday
    CITY EDITION

    Thirteen charged in cigarette smuggling

    BY ANTHONY M. DESTEFANO. STAFF WRITER

    An Asian organized crime group teamed up with a group of Armenian and
    Polish immigrants to smuggle millions of dollars worth of counterfeit
    Marlboro cigarettes into Brooklyn and Queens from China, federal
    prosecutors charged yesterday.

    The cigarette smuggling led to cigarette tax losses of more than $1
    million to New York State, officials said.

    A total of 13 people, including alleged ringleader Azat Oganessian,
    33, an Armenian immigrant who has been living in Brooklyn, were
    charged yesterday in an indictment filed in federal court in Brooklyn
    with conspiracy to smuggle the cigarettes as well as narcotics
    trafficking.

    The investigation, which involved a special FBI-NYPD task force on
    Eurasian crime, lasted 19 months and was sparked by an informant who
    had information about suspected cigarette smuggling and narcotics in
    the city's Polish immigrant community, federal law enforcement
    officials said. The task force focuses on immigrant groups from the
    former Soviet Union and East Asia.

    Officials with the U.S. attorney's office in Brooklyn said more than
    $5 million in fake Marlboro cigarettes were made in China and
    transported by the Chinese gang to Los Angeles. It was there, the
    officials said, that the Oganessian organization picked up more than
    800 cases of the cigarettes and trucked them to New Jersey and
    Philadelphia. Once on the East Coast, the defendants placed fake New
    York State tax stamps on the packages.

    Each case of cigarettes contained 50 cartons, amounting to a total of
    4,000 cartons shipped as part of the alleged conspiracy, Assistant
    U.S. Attorney Scott Morvillo said.

    The cigarettes, which the gang acquired for $10 a carton, were
    generally sold for $22 to $32 a carton to delis and restaurants in
    Brooklyn and Queens, he said.

    The indictment also charged Oganessian, who is known as Ozzy, with
    conspiring to distribute more than 500 grams of methamphetamine. Six
    other defendants also were charged with being part of that drug
    conspiracy. Oganessian's attorney could not be reached for comment
    yesterday.

    Oganessian, who was already being held without bail on the earlier
    case, didn't appear in court yesterday.
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