TRENTON - Convicted criminals and individuals with ties
to organized crime have dumped tons of contaminated soil and construction
debris near residential areas and waterways in New Jersey in recent years,
enabled by gaping loopholes in state regulations, investigators say.
The scheme stretches across the state, from Palmyra to
Newark, according to the State Commission of Investigation, which held a
three-hour hearing on the matter Wednesday at the Statehouse.
Between 2012 and 2013, a small recycling center in South
Jersey became a "sprawling landfill occupied by acres of construction
debris strewn within shouting distance of the Delaware River," Lee C.
Seglem, acting executive director of the commission, said in an opening
statement.
"It should surprise no one that the architects of
this toxic trafficking include organized-crime associates and convicted
criminals," he said.
Rogue "dirt brokers," Seglem said, have been
able to recruit truckers to haul contaminated soil from New York to unauthorized
locations in the Garden State.
Unlike solid-waste haulers, the brokers are "subject
to no licensing requirements, not even simple background checks," Seglem
said.
The investigation is continuing. Once it is complete, the
commission will issue recommendations. As a result of the investigation so far,
two Hudson County men have been sentenced to federal prison for extortion,
investigators said.
The commission's findings are disconcerting not least
because it released a report just five years ago exposing organized crime's
role in the solid-waste industry. The current investigation is a spin-off of
the 2011 effort.
In Palmyra, a 100-acre site operated by Jersey Recycling
Services adjacent to the Pennsauken Creek had state authorization to accept
20,000 cubic yards annually of leaves and vegetation to be processed and sold
as mulch to the general public, said Michael Dancisin, senior special agent
with the commission.
The site's owner, Bradley Sirkin, skirted regulations,
hauling in 19 times that amount of contaminated soil, concrete, and other
materials for which he didn't have a permit to process. The debris came from
construction sites in Philadelphia, Camden, and New Brunswick, investigators
said.
The soil from the construction site of what was to become
Camden Community Charter School and a development in New Brunswick contained
levels of PAHs, a carcinogen, that exceeded safety thresholds for residential
areas.
Sirkin told contractors his facility had been approved by
the state to accept such materials, which was not true, investigators said.
Jersey Recycling Services (JRS) mixed clean topsoil with
contaminated dirt to sell mulch to landscapers, who in turn sold it to the
public, investigators said, citing interviews with employees.
However, investigators could not say definitively whether
the "dirty dirt" ended up in homeowners' flower beds and vegetable
gardens, since they couldn't test what had been sold.
Soon after the commission alerted the state Department of
Environmental Protection to its findings in 2013, the agency shut down the
Palmyra site.
The DEP took photos showing runoff into the Pennsauken
Creek. The department sent Sirkin notice of violations, but by then he had
moved to Boca Raton, Fla., investigators said.
Thomas Farrell, chief of the department's Bureau of Solid
Waste Compliance and Enforcement, said he was working with the Attorney
General's Office "to generate an order to show cause" and make Sirkin
take corrective actions.
Investigators said Sirkin was convicted on federal
racketeering charges in the 1990s, is related to a member of the Lucchese crime
family in New York, and has a relationship with a high-ranking member of the
Philadelphia mob.
A source, speaking on condition of anonymity, identified
that person as Joey Merlino, the mob boss who was released from prison last
year.
In a more direct connection with organized crime, bank
records reviewed by investigators show that a captain in New York's Bonanno
crime family gave a $50,000 "shareholder loan" to JRS through a shell
company. Sirkin never repaid the loan.
Dancisin, the special agent, testified that dirt broker
Frank Gillette "collected payments" from JRS. It was not clear how
much money Gillette or the Bonanno crime-family member made from the arrangement.
Gillette, who investigators said has served time for
petty larceny and writing bad checks, was issued a subpoena to testify at
Wednesday's hearing. He appeared with his attorney and declined to answer
questions, asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
The commission also served subpoenas on Sirkin, whose
attorney wrote back that Sirkin also would assert his Fifth Amendment right.
"It's all about money," said Robert Collins,
another SCI special agent, describing the motivation behind organized crime's
infiltration of the recycling industry. "Finding a home for soil,
especially contaminated soil, is extremely expensive."
Gillette and his associate in the Bonanno crime family
also were involved in a scheme to dump contaminated dirt in the Cliffwood Beach
section of Old Bridge Township, according to investigators.
Hurricane Sandy caused significant beach erosion there,
and homeowners sought the help of Gregory Guido, a dirt broker, to bring in
fill material, according to a commission investigator.
Guido, who had been convicted on racketeering charges,
collaborated with Gillette to dump contaminated material on the beach,
investigators said. When homeowners saw the debris, they asked Guido to stop
hauling it.
But he continued, investigators said, working with
Gillette to transport the dirt, which contained known carcinogens, from a
demolition site in the Bronx to Cliffwood Beach and to the Middlesex County
Utility Authority. Guido, who could not be reached Wednesday, has spoken with
commission investigators privately.
The chemicals are airborne, posing a danger to
homeowners, and also could run off into the Raritan Bay, adjacent to the beach.
The township is capping the site as part of a remediation
project that cost taxpayers there $250,000. The area will need to be monitored
for the next 30 years, said agent Joseph Bredehoft.
Bank records reviewed by investigators show that the
enterprise was lucrative for some. A subcontractor paid $320,000 to companies
controlled by Gillette. Bredehoft also said records show that Gillette had
written a $25,000 check to his contact in the Bonanno crime family.
"In short time, these people . . . had reaped great
profits at the cost of the citizens," Bredehoft said.
Gary Sondermeyer, who worked at the DEP for 30 years
before becoming vice president of operations for Bayshore Recycling Inc. in
2010, told the commission that inspection resources at the agency were "so
limited" that these sites "are virtually unbridled."
Source: Philly.com
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