U.S. charges New York company with illegal Chinese
equipment sales
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[November 08, 2019] By
Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Stempel
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Federal prosecutors
have filed criminal charges accusing a New York company of exposing the
U.S. government and private customers to security risks by illegally
importing and selling surveillance and security equipment from China.
The charges against Aventura Technologies Inc, which is based in
Commack, New York, and seven current and former employees were made
public on Thursday in the federal court in Brooklyn. Six of the people
have been arrested, including Jack Cabasso, the man accused of leading
the scheme.
Cabasso was ordered jailed without bail following a brief court
appearance, while the other five, including Cabasso's wife, Frances
Cabasso, were released. Aventura and lawyers for the Cabassos could not
immediately be reached for comment.
Prosecutors said the defendants falsely told customers that Aventura's
products were made in the United States rather than imported, mainly
from China, in a scheme that ran from 2006 until this month. Some of
those products carried known cybersecurity risks, according to
prosecutors.
The company's largest customers are U.S. government agencies including
the Army, Navy and Air Force, though it also sold to private companies,
making about $88 million since 2010, prosecutors said.
Founded in 1999, Aventura describes itself on its website as a "true
'single-source' manufacturer" providing security hardware, software and
peripheral products to government, military and enterprise customers.
According to the complaint, Aventura sometimes sold Chinese imports with
false "Made in the U.S.A." labels already affixed or displayed on
packaging.
U.S. Attorney Richard Donoghue said the government began investigating
the alleged scheme after a member of an Air Force security unit saw an
image of a Chinese security service badge in software for one device.
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Jonathan Lasker, Director of Operations at Aventura Technologies
Inc., exits Brooklyn Federal Court following his arraignment in the
Brooklyn borough of New York, U.S., November 7, 2019.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
Prosecutors said Aventura reported having sold $20.7 million of security
equipment to the U.S. government through the end of 2018 via U.S. General
Services Administration contracts.
They also accused Aventura of misrepresenting itself as a "woman-owned small
business" in order to win government contracts set aside for such businesses,
falsely listing Cabasso's wife, Frances, as the company's owner and chief
executive.
The complaint included communications that, according to prosecutors, show the
defendants knew about the illegal imports.
It quoted an instant message from the defendant Eduard Matulik, a director of
international sales, to a colleague saying 'im going to china because I need to
know what we are selling and have to source a bunch of stuff," and that "jack
doesn't have time and we don't know what we are selling anymore."
Prosecutors said in court papers that Jack Cabasso should not be released on
bail because his wealth, foreign connections and "lengthy criminal history,"
including a conviction for tampering with a jury in an earlier fraud case
against him, point to a high risk that he will flee the country.
They said they had seized $3 million and a luxury yacht from him, but believed
he has other assets offshore.
(Reporting by Brendan Pierson and Jonathan Stempel in New York; editing by
Jonathan Oatis and Bill Berkrot)
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