NYPD workers among 17 NYC employees busted in $1.5M COVID relief scam

The Bobster

Senior News Editor since 2004

NYPD workers among 17 NYC employees busted in $1.5M COVID relief scam​



By
Ben Feuerherd and

Mark Lungariello


November 30, 2022 6:02pm
Updated










Seventeen New York City municipal workers – including seven from the NYPD and one MTA staffer – were busted in separate COVID-19 relief schemes that netted them over $1.5 million in federal funds, prosecutors said Wednesday.
Some of the conspirators allegedly spent the fraudulently obtained cash to gamble or on stocks, furniture and electronics, according to criminal complaints unsealed in Manhattan federal court.
The scams centered on the oft-abused US Small Business Administration’s Economic Injury Disaster Loan program meant to help those struggling during the pandemic.
In the main alleged scheme, ringleader Rodney Smith, 54, is accused of conspiring to file fraudulent applications — many claiming to be on behalf of hair and nail salons — through the SBA program in 2020. The different applications claimed similar numbers of employees and revenues, prosecutors said.
The eight applicants now charged include five employees of the NYPD, an MTA worker, a staffer with the city’s Human Resources Administration and one person who worked for a Big Apple-based nonprofit.




00:01 01:27
They netted between $52,000 and $60,000 a pop — and then paid Smith and others thousands in kickbacks, a complaint alleges. In total, Smith is suspected of being involved in 95 fraudulent applications, which investigators linked to him through one IP address tied to his Brooklyn home.

Retired New York City Department of Corrections worker Trevor Gordon leaves the federal courthouse in Manhattan on Nov. 30, 2022.Retired New York City Department of Corrections worker Trevor Gordon leaves the federal courthouse in Manhattan on Nov. 30, 2022.Gregory P. Mango
He now faces charges of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud and aggravated identity theft.


In separate complaints, 10 others were charged — including three Department of Education workers, two NYPD employees, a city Department of Transportation worker, an employee of the Administration of Children’s Services and one current and former Department of Corrections employee.


The alleged fraudsters applied to the EIDL and the federal Payment Protection Program, inflating revenues for existing businesses or declaring businesses that didn’t exist, court documents claimed.


Some applicants falsely claimed to have employees, then used the revenues for stock investments and “luxury clothing items,” prosecutors alleged.

Rodney Smith is accused of conspiring with NYPD employees and others for fraudulent pandemic-relief loans.Rodney Smith hides his face as he leaves court in Manhattan. Smith is accused of conspiring with NYPD employees and others for fraudulent pandemic-relief loans.Gregory P. Mango
IRS Criminal Investigations Special Agent in Charge Thomas Fattorusso said in a statement the arrests should send “a clear message.”


“Nobody is above the law and while the pandemic has receded from the headlines, IRS-CI’s commitment to bringing those who defrauded these programs to justice remains unwavering,” Fattorusso said.


Damian Williams, US Attorney for the Southern District of New York, called the alleged schemes “offensive.”


“Scheming to seal Government funds intended to help small businesses weather a national emergency is offensive,” he said in a statement.


“And, as public employees, these folks should have known better. This Office will continue to prosecute those who use fraud to line their pockets with taxpayer money.”

NYPD employee Zhane Ratcliff is one of 17 workers charged, according to complaints unsealed on Nov. 30, 2022.NYPD employee Zhane Ratcliff is one of 17 workers charged, according to complaints unsealed on Nov. 30, 2022.Gregory P. Mango
The following were charged with conspiracy to commit wire fraud and wire fraud alongside Smith, with each charge carrying a maximum sentence of up to 20 years in prison:


  • Sheron Charles, 56, Queens, worked for a nonprofit
  • Denise Gant, 52, Brooklyn, NYPD
  • Priscilla Jackson, 41, Brooklyn, MTA
  • Yolanda Lawrence, 48, Brooklyn, NYC Human Resources Administration
  • Yolanda Ratcliff, 48, Inwood, NYPD
  • Zhane Ratcliff, 27, Brooklyn, NYPD
  • Phya Scott, 51, Brooklyn, NYPD
  • Ebony Simon, 45, Brooklyn, NYPD




The following were charged with wire fraud, which carries a sentence of up to 20 years in prison:


  • Brandon Boyle, 31, New York, worked for NYPD
  • Delilah Cummings, 37, Brooklyn, NYC Department of Education
  • Vashawn Foreman, 40, Queens, DOE
  • Trevor Gordon, 66, Brooklyn, Department of Corrections (retired)
  • Dione Hall, 55, Queens
  • Toni McCullough, 39, Brooklyn, DOE
  • Jarod Ottley, 57, Valley Stream, New York, NYC Department of Transportation
  • Ronette Short, 40, Brooklyn, NYC Administration for Children’s Services
  • Edwin Skepple, 40, West Nyack, New York, Department of Correction
  • Walter Susswell, 28, Queens, NYPD
 
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