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Attorney General Paula T. Dow and
Criminal Justice Director Stephen J.
Taylor announced that the former
recreation supervisor for Perth
Amboy was sentenced for stealing
city funds which she said she used
for purchases for herself and former
mayor Joseph Vas.
According to Director Taylor, Ana
Pastrana, 50, of Perth Amboy, was
sentenced yesterday to five years of
probation by Superior Court Judge
Frederick P. DeVesa in Middlesex
County. She was ordered to pay
$11,875 in restitution to the City
of Perth Amboy and to serve 100
hours of community service. Pastrana
was required to forfeit her city job
and is permanently barred from
public employment.
Deputy Attorney General Dianne C.
DiGiamber Deal and Deputy Attorney
General Pearl Minato represented the
Division of Criminal Justice
Corruption Bureau at the sentencing.
Pastrana pleaded guilty on March 30,
2009 to third-degree theft by
unlawful taking. In pleading guilty,
Pastrana admitted that she used city
funds to pay off a credit card in
her name that was used to purchase
personal items for herself and
former mayor Vas.
The credit card bills were paid
using funds from a bank account for
the Perth Amboy Housing Development
Corporation that was under the
control of Jeffrey D. Gumbs Sr., who
was city director of human services
and superintendent of recreation
under Vas. Pastrana said that, at
Vas’ direction, she used city funds
to pay for credit card purchases of
sneakers, beachwear and sportswear
for Vas.
On March 23, 2009, Gumbs, 51, of
Wilmington, Del., pleaded guilty
before Judge DeVesa to theft,
misapplication of government
property and tampering with public
records. He admitted he submitted
fraudulent invoices to the city to
obtain payment for personal expenses
of both Vas and himself. His
sentencing is pending.
Vas, 55, a New Jersey assemblyman,
was indicted by the Division of
Criminal Justice on March 11 in
connection with those allegations.
He was charged with conspiring with
city employees to steal
approximately $5,000 in funds of the
City of Perth Amboy to pay for
personal purchases and expenses. The
indictment also charged Vas and his
personal driver, Anthony S. Jones,
in connection with a scheme in which
Vas allegedly rigged a public
lottery so Jones won the opportunity
to buy an affordable two-family home
through the Perth Amboy Home
Program. The charges in the
indictment are pending.
On May 21, 2009, Vas was charged in
a second 19-count indictment along
with his longtime aide Melvin Ramos,
53, two corporations that were city
vendors, and two owners of one of
the corporations. The indictment
alleges, among other things, that
Vas and Ramos solicited city
employees and others to make
fraudulent contributions to Vas’
2006 campaign for the U.S. House of
Representatives. It further alleges
Vas and Ramos unlawfully arranged
for a city contractor to pay a
$58,000 catering bill for a ribbon
cutting ceremony at Perth Amboy’s
new Public Safety-Court-Community
Complex in April 2008. They
allegedly had the contractor bill
the amount to the city under its
contract to provide management
services for construction of the new
complex, thereby concealing the
city’s payment of the catering bill.
The charges in that indictment are
also pending.
A press release about the May 21
indictment and a copy of the
indictment are posted on the
Attorney General’s Web page at
www.njpublicsafety.com. Indictments
are merely accusations and the
defendants are presumed innocent
until proven guilty.
On June 5, 2009, a key advisor to
Vas’ 2006 congressional campaign,
Raymond Geneske, 74, of Perth Amboy,
pleaded guilty before Judge DeVesa
to a third-degree charge of money
laundering. He admitted that he
solicited employees of the City of
Perth Amboy and others to make
fraudulent contributions to Vas’
campaign. His sentencing is pending.
The prosecution of Pastrana stemmed
from an investigation by the
Division of Criminal Justice
Corruption Bureau. Deputy Attorneys
General Deal and Minato are
prosecuting the case. The
investigation was led by Sgt. Dino
Dettorre and Detective Benjamin
Kukis, assisted by Lt. Daniel
O'Brien, Sgt. Robert McGrath,
Detective Lee Bailey, Detective
Melissa Calkin, Detective Lisa
Cawley, Detective Shaun Egan,
Detective Kiersten Pentony,
Detective Robert Stemmer and Civil
Investigator Joseph Salvatore.
The Division of Criminal Justice has
established a toll-free Corruption
Tipline for the public to report
corruption, financial crime and
other illegal activities:
1-866-TIPS-4CJ.
Additionally, the public can log on
to the Division Web site at
www.njdcj.org to report
suspected wrongdoing. All
information received through the
Tipline or Web page will remain
confidential. |