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Indictment charges gambler of scamming charities, non-profits

CLIFFVIEW PILOT HAS IT FIRST: Charities and non-profit organizations that benefit schoolchildren and support people with life-threatening illnesses lost $768,000 to a compulsive gambler who promised them several rounds at the Augusta National Golf Course, a walk-on role on “Desperate Housewives,” and tickets to the Tony Awards but never delivered, an indictment handed up by a federal grand jury in Newark today charges.

Photo Credit: Cliffview Pilot

After the winning bidders made their pledges and he received his commissions, 34-year-old Gregory Ciccone of Woodland Park tried to stall them — including once telling a winning bidder that the 2009 Tour de France had been postponed, federal authorities said.

Ciccone used the ill-gotten gains, in part, to feed a gambling habit, they said.

Several victims were organizing a class action suit when federal agents arrested Ciccone – the founder, owner and president of Wayne-based GAC Consulting – last fall.

Today’s indictment extends the period of the fraud, increasing the originally posted losses of $650,000.

From at least January 2007 through April 2010, Ciccone “induced charities and non-profit organizations to enter into contracts with GAC, which held itself out as a provider of high-value auction items to charities and non-profit organizations,” U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman said.

“The charities typically paid GAC both an up-front retainer and a commission on the total amount of charitable pledges raised as a result of GAC’s contracted obligations,” he added. “Ciccone and GAC rarely, if ever, provided the promised items to the winning bidders, and refused to provide refunds of monies paid.”

“The promises he made from the very beginning were as false as the excuses he gave when he couldn’t deliver,” Fishman said. “Victims of schemes like these are not only the charities and donors who are defrauded, but also the worthy causes that lose out because individuals are wary of giving.”

FBI Special Agent in Charge Michael B. Ward of the Newark field office called the alleged fraud “unconscionable…. In the end, those [who] depend on charities for support are victimized, all in furtherance of one man’s lifestyle.”

They apparently weren’t the only ones.

One complainant said Ciccone “stuck my company for over $100,000 in renovations to his home. He spent money like water and then sent me fake wire transfers to show his income. I was contacted by his own brother telling me he defrauded his own parents… He is a liar and a cheat.”

Ciccone has contended he was being slandered.

“I apologize to all of my clients and potential clients for this unfortunate situation and look forward to continue success and relationships in raising money for worthwhile non-profit organizations,” Ciccone wrote in an online message board posting last year.

Ciccone created the company in Sept. 2004 to “assist non-profit organizations, corporations and individuals with development and fundraising through special events and high-end auctions, along with grant writing and underwriting opportunities,” according to his LinkedIn profile.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Mack of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Health Care and Government Fraud Unit in Newark is handling the case.



 


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