Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney
for the Southern District of New York, announced that GARY ORTIZ, a former New
York City Police Department (NYPD) officer, was sentenced today to one year and
one day in prison for engaging in a scheme involving the illegal interstate
transport of firearms and stolen goods. ORTIZ was sentenced in Manhattan
federal court by U.S. District Judge Paul G. Gardephe.
Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara
said: “Justice has been served today against Gary Ortiz, who tarnished his
badge, violated the laws he swore to uphold, and betrayed his fellow officers,
the NYPD, and the residents of New York City he swore to protect.”
According to the court filings and
statements made in court:
From December 2010 to October 2011,
ORTIZ, who joined the conspiracy in February 2011, and his co-conspirators,
transported firearms and stolen goods, including cigarettes and other merchandise,
across state lines. ORTIZ was an active duty NYPD officer at the time he
committed the offenses.
ORTIZ helped steal hundreds of cases of
cigarettes from trucks parked outside a warehouse and then transported the
stolen cigarettes from Virginia to New York. He also participated in a scheme
to transport 20 firearms, including three M-16 rifles, one shotgun, and 16
handguns—the majority of which had been defaced to remove or alter the serial
number, and all of which had been disabled—from New Jersey to New York. The
total street value of the goods ORTIZ helped transport across state lines was
approximately $1 million. In total, ORTIZ was paid $18,000 for his role in the
schemes.
In addition to the prison term, Judge
Gardephe sentenced ORTIZ, 28, of Brooklyn, New York, to two years of supervised
release and ordered him to pay a $200 special assessment fee. ORTIZ also has
agreed to a money judgment of $18,000 representing his share of the crime
proceeds, and has relinquished his interests in guns that were seized from him
at the time of his arrest.
ORTIZ was originally charged in a
four-count complaint along with 11 co-conspirators, many of whom were fellow
NYPD officers. All of the defendants have now pled guilty, except Ali Oklu, an
active duty NYPD officer at the time he allegedly committed the offenses. The
charges and allegations against Oklu are merely accusations and he is presumed
innocent unless and until proven guilty.
A chart containing the status of each
defendant is below.
Mr. Bharara praised the investigative
work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Internal Affairs Bureau of
the NYPD.
This case is being handled by the
Office’s Public Corruption and Complex Frauds Units. Assistant United States
Attorney Carrie H. Cohen is in charge of the prosecution.
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