NEW YORK (CBSNewYork) – An NYPD officer and two other men
have been indicted on charges of extortion for allegedly threatening a Queens
restaurant owner and collecting “protection” money, prosecutors announced
Tuesday.
As WCBS 880′s Irene Cornell, it was a double betrayal for an
Astoria restaurant owner. First, prosecutors said he was shaken down by two
fellow Albanians – Redinel Dervishaj and Denis Nikolla – who demanded monthly
payments.
Then, the victim turned to his friend and NYPD officer,
Besnik Llakatura, for help. Instead, Llakatura was corrupt and part of the
extortion scheme, said prosecutors.
The NYPD officer encouraged the business owner to comply
with the demands, Cornell reported.
When the victim resisted paying the defendants, authorities
said he was threatened and chased through the streets by a defendant with a
gun.
“The defendants told their victims they offered
‘protection,’ but in reality they peddled fear and intimidation through the
Albanian community – their community – of Queens,” United States Attorney
Loretta Lynch said in a statement. “When one victim turned to law enforcement
for help, he was betrayed again by a corrupt officer on the take, who turned
his back on his badge, his oath and his friend in exchange for extortion money
in his pocket.”
Over the course of five months, prosecutors said the
defendants pocketed $24,000 from their victim.
The NYPD officer – who has worked out of the 120 Precinct on
Staten Island since 2006 – was later caught on tape joking about how he “taxes”
the local businesses, Cornell reported.
“By creating a climate of fear, the defendants allegedly
coerced an innocent restaurant owner into paying for so-called protective
services.
The victim was further betrayed when seeking the assistance of Besnik
Llakatura, an NYPD officer whose sinister intentions were shrouded by his badge
of honor.
But Llakatura didn’t serve his community with honor; he, instead,
abused his powers to the detriment of the public trust. He remains an exception
to those law enforcement officers who work selflessly to weed out crime and
corruption in their communities,” FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge George
Venizelos said in a statement.
The defendants were indicted on three counts including
extortion conspiracy and brandishing a firearm in relation to the extortion.
They were due to be arraigned later Tuesday at the United States District Court
for the Eastern District of New York.
Llakatura has been suspended without pay.
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