WASHINGTON—Veniamin Gonikman, 56, a
naturalized U.S. citizen originally from Ukraine, was sentenced today in
federal court for his role in an international conspiracy to compel Eastern
European women to work in exotic dance clubs in the Detroit metropolitan area.
U.S. District Court Judge Victoria A. Roberts sentenced Gonikman to 36 months
in prison followed by three years of supervised release. He is the ninth and
final member of the charged conspiracy to be sentenced.
Gonikman became a fugitive in 2005
following the arrests of his co-conspirators, Aleksandr Maksimenko and Michael
Aronov. He was apprehended in Ukraine in January 2011 and pleaded guilty to
money laundering on September 13, 2011. According to information presented in
court filings, between September 2001 and February 2005, Gonikman, together
with Maksimenko and Aronov, operated Beauty Search Inc., a business that
brokered and managed Eastern European women who performed in exotic dance clubs
in the Detroit area. The three men recruited a number of these women in
Ukraine, facilitated their illegal entry into the United States, and then
harbored them for commercial advantage and private financial gain. Gonikman
obtained a share of the proceeds earned by the women and transferred the money
to Ukraine in order to promote and carry on the Beauty Search business.
“Human trafficking is the equivalent of
modern day slavery. It deprives the victims of their freedom and dignity and it
has no place in our country,” said Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General
for the Civil Rights Division. “The Justice Department is committed to the
aggressive prosecution of those who rob individuals of their freedom.”
“This sentence brings the final member
of this human trafficking ring to justice,” Barbara McQuade, U.S. Attorney for
the Eastern District of Michigan. “These defendants treated human beings like a
commodity, enticing Eastern European women to come to the United States
illegally and then exploiting them for commercial advantage.”
“The defendants in this case preyed on
young and vulnerable women from a foreign country. These women were brought to
America with promises of education and travel, and instead forced to work in
seedy strip clubs,” said Brian M. Moskowitz, Special Agent in Charge of
Immigration and Customs Enforcement Homeland Security Investigations (ICE-HSI)
in Detroit. “After more than seven years of unyielding resolve on the part of
our special agents and prosecutors, we are able to formally end this horrific
chapter in the lives of the victims and allow them to now move on knowing that
justice has prevailed.”
“Justice has been served knowing that
Gonikman, Maksimenko, and Aronov are behind bars for their reprehensible
behaviors,” said Erick Martinez, Special Agent in Charge of Internal Revenue
Service Criminal Investigation. “These individuals took advantage of someone’s
daughter, sister, or granddaughter. The joint work and dedication of the law
enforcement community shows that these crimes will not be tolerated.”
“This sentencing comes as the result of
the hard work of the FBI and law enforcement partner agencies as well as
federal prosecutors,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Andrew G. Arena. “It
sends the message that anyone who seeks to profit from human trafficking will
be pursued and prosecuted vigorously. These despicable acts designed to enslave
women have no place in our society.”
The lead defendants in this case,
Maksimenko and Aronov, pleaded guilty in 2006 to forced labor, immigration, and
money laundering charges. Maksimenko was sentenced to 14 years in prison and
ordered to pay $1,570,450 in restitution to the victims. Aronov was sentenced
to seven-and-a-half years in prison and ordered to pay $1 million in
restitution.
Six other defendants were also convicted
in 2006 for their respective roles in the conspiracy, including: Duay Jado, a
Greek national, who was sentenced to four years in prison for setting a
victim’s car on fire to retaliate for her escape and to intimidate the other
victims; two Ukrainian nationals, Eygeniy Propenko and Alexander Bondarenko,
who were convicted of visa fraud to facilitate victims’ illegal entry into the
United States; Anna Gonikman-Starchenko, a Ukrainian national formerly married
to Gonikman, Niki Papoutsaki, a Greek national formerly married to Aleksandr
Maksimenko; and Valentina Maksimenko, a naturalized U.S. citizen also formerly
married to Veniamin Gonikman, all three of whom pleaded guilty to obstruction-related
charges.
The case was investigated by ICE, the
FBI, the IRS, and the State Department. The case was prosecuted by Assistant
U.S. Attorney Mark Chutkow and Trial Attorney Benjamin J. Hawk of the Civil
Rights Division’s Human Trafficking Prosecution Unit. Assistant U.S. Attorney
Peter Ziedas is handling the asset forfeiture part of the case.
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