|
Arpaio said that while most bets were made online through Costa Rica-based betting sites, the payouts and collections occurred in local Phoenix bars and restaurants throughout the Valley.
"Millions of dollars were being collected, sometimes extorted from people here who placed bets through these illegal gambling operations," Arpaio said. "If someone couldn't pay their debts, interest rates as high as 51 percent were levied."
Arpaio said that large amounts of cocaine were also flowing through the gambling syndicates. "Some people were even forced to give up their homes and their retirements to pay off the organizations' loan sharks," Arpaio said.
In a news conference, Arpaio told reporters that 44 search warrants were simultaneously executed Tuesday morning, including a number of private residences, businesses and even private vaults. At the same time, search warrants were being actioned in Las Vegas and Los Angeles he revealed.
The investigation, conducted with the assistance of Arizona Attorney General Terry Goddard's Office, will freeze 120 local bank accounts, as well as place racketeering liens on several homes and businesses. 40 suspects who were responsible for the day-to-day operations of the organisations, including bookies, collectors, loan sharks and Web site owners, have been identified.
Without giving any specific details, the Sheriff told reporters that numerous arrests have been made and more are anticipated. Hundreds of Arizona bettors had also been identified, presumably from confiscated records of the gambling ring, and these would likely be contacted, the enforcement officer advised.
|
|