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|    nyc.politics    |    Politics specific to New York City    |    92,003 messages    |
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|    Message 90,240 of 92,003    |
|    Bean Soup to All    |
|    Taco Bake: Stop-and-frisk poster boy bus    |
|    20 Jul 19 22:45:39    |
      XPost: alt.politics.usa.republican, vegas.general, miami.general       XPost: austin.general       From: beansoup@cnn.com              His ticket has finally been punched!              A poster-boy opponent of the NYPD’s stop-and-frisk program was       busted by the feds in an elaborate ticket-scalping scheme —       while on probation for an earlier rip-off that preyed on       tourists hoping to attend blockbuster Broadway shows and       sporting events.              Angel Ortiz — who publicly blasted stop and frisk and later       scored $15,000 from the city through a class-action suit —       allegedly used stolen credit card information to buy more than       $180,000 worth of tickets to “The Book of Mormon,” “Dear Evan       Hansen” and other shows during 2016 and 2017.              Ortiz, 24, used a variety of aliases to hawk the tickets on       Craigslist, where he also offered tough-to-get tickets to the       smash musical “Hamilton,” according to White Plains federal       prosecutors.              But some of the ducats he allegedly sold were actually fakes,       which one repeat customer found out the hard way by purchasing       six for between $3,000 and $3,200.              Ortiz’s racket also involved several PayPal accounts that he       opened with stolen identities and used to accept payments, court       papers said.              Ortiz was previously busted three times for selling counterfeit       tickets and was sentenced to five years probation in 2014.              At the time, he claimed he was going straight by working as a       doorman in Midtown but expressed no remorse and actually blamed       his victims.              “I’m their karma and this is my karma — we all got karma,” he       said outside court.              Ortiz also said the people he scammed could have had “a way       worse experience.”              “They could have come to New York and never left,” he said       ominously.              Ortiz was busted by US Postal Inspection Service agents on       Tuesday in Kissimmee, Fla., where court papers say the former       Bronx resident lives in a gated community about 10 minutes from       Disney World.              He’s charged with six counts of wire fraud, access device fraud       and aggravated identity theft, which each carry maximum       sentences of 10 to 20 years in prison.              Ortiz was released without bond pending a future appearance in       White Plains federal court.              He didn’t return a message seeking comment, and the federal       defender appointed to represent him in Florida declined to       comment.              A spokeswoman for the Postal Inspection Service urged people to       only buy tickets to events from “reputable” sellers.              “Never forget: if an offer sounds too good to be true, it is,”       spokeswoman Donna Harris said.              https://tinyurl.com/y22goxve                      --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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