Mayors, rabbis arrested in NJ corruption probe

NEWARK, (Reuters) – Dozens of New Jersey  politicians, officials and prominent rabbis were arrested yesterday in a sweeping federal probe that uncovered political  corruption, human organ sales and money laundering from New  York to Israel, officials said.

The 10-year investigation, dubbed “Operation Bid Rig,”  exposed influence-peddling and bribe-taking among a network of  public officials and a separate multimillion dollar  money-laundering ring that funneled funds through charities  operated by local rabbis, said the U.S. Attorney’s office in  Newark, New Jersey.

The cast of the 44 arrested featured Hoboken, New Jersey,  Mayor Peter Cammarano, who took office three weeks ago in the  industrial city visible across the Hudson River from New York.

Others accused were mayors of nearby Secaucus and  Ridgefield, state Assemblymen, a deputy mayor, city council  members, housing, planning and zoning officials, building  inspectors and political candidates.

“New Jersey’s corruption problem is one of the worst, if  not the worst, in the nation,” said Ed Kahrer, assistant  special agent in charge of the FBI’s white collar crime and  public corruption program in New Jersey, who has worked on the  investigation since it began in July 1999.

“It has become ingrained in New Jersey’s political  culture,” he said, calling corruption “a cancer.”

Central to the investigation was an informant who was  charged with bank fraud in 2006 and posed undercover as a real  estate developer and owner of a tile business who paid off  officials to win project approval and public contracts in  northern New Jersey, according to documents in the case.

The public officials stand accused of taking bribes for  pledging their help getting permits and projects prioritized  and approved or steering contracts to the witness.

In scenes that could have been lifted from the hit TV  series “The Sopranos,” about New Jersey organized crime, they  met in diners, parking lots, even bathrooms, officials said.

“The politicians willingly put themselves up for sale,”  said Acting U.S. Attorney Ralph Marra. “The victims are the  average citizens and the honest business people in this state.  They don’t have a chance in this culture of corruption.”

The public corruption uncovered by the informant led him to  the separate money-laundering network by rabbis who operated  between Brooklyn, Deal, New Jersey, and Israel, authorities  said. They laundered some $3 million for the undercover witness  between June 2007 and July 2009, authorities said.

“These complaints paint a disgraceful picture of religious  leaders heading money laundering crews acting as crime bosses,”  Marra said. “They used purported charities, entities supposed  set up to do good works as vehicles for laundering millions of  dollars in illicit funds.”

Rabbis accused of money-laundering were Saul Kassin, chief  rabbi of a large Syrian Jewish synagogue in Brooklyn; Eliahu  Ben Haim, principal rabbi of a synagogue in Deal; Edmund Nahum,  principal rabbi of another synagogue in Deal; and Mordchai  Fish, a rabbi at a synagogue in Brooklyn.

The probe also uncovered Levy Izhak Rosenbaum of Brooklyn,  who is accused of conspiring to broker the sale of a human  kidney for a transplant. According to the complaint, Rosenbaum  said he had been brokering sale of kidneys for 10 years.

“His business was to entice vulnerable people to give up a  kidney for $10,000 which he would turn around and sell for  $160,000,” said Marra.

Several of the public officials were accused of taking  bribes of just $10,000, authorities said. Cammarano, at 31 the  youngest ever mayor of Hoboken, was charged with taking $25,000  in bribes, including $10,000 last Thursday.

Most of those accused were arrested in a sweep across New  Jersey by more than 300 federal agents early yesterday.