Businessman helps bust counterfeit ring
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A Surf City businessman inadvertently helped
authorities uncover a Las Vegas counterfeiting operation when he noticed
a patron using a fake $20 bill.
Henry Kwon, 52, owner of Bill’s Liquor Store on Beach Boulevard, said
Leroy Raffaelli, 31, of Las Vegas, came into his store Jan. 1 and
purchased about $5 worth of stuff, including a bottle of water and some
candy. He paid for it with a $20 bill.
“I told him it was fake, and he ran out,†Kwon said.
That was when Kwon, an 11-year resident, gave chase, pursuing
Raffaelli on foot until police caught up with him.
Because of Kwon’s persistence, Huntington Beach detectives and U.S.
Secret Service agents arrested Raffaelli and fellow Las Vegas resident
Charles LaRue, 51, seizing $49,280 worth of fake $20 and $100 bills
created using inkjet printers.
The money, as well as stolen credit cards, personal and commercial
checks, fake driver’s licenses, various personal financial records of
victims and other counterfeiting paraphernalia, was found in cars
belonging to the two men parked outside a Westminster hotel room.
“This is a case of great cooperative effort between the Huntington
Beach Police, the Secret Service and United States attorney’s office,â€
said Robert Brenner, the resident agent in charge of Orange County.
After the Huntington Beach arrests, Secret Service agents traced the
case through parts of Southern California, Ohio, Florida and Nevada,
where a counterfeiting plant was seized at a Las Vegas residence.
LaRue and Raffaelli were arraigned in a Santa Ana courtroom last week,
and are awaiting trial. Meanwhile, Secret Service agents are searching
for 47-year-old Terry Hensley, also of Las Vegas, in connection with the
counterfeiting ring.
Huntington Beach Det. James Dowling issued the arrest warrants for the
two men, and said this is the largest counterfeiting case the city has
ever seen.
“Normally, we have isolated reports of counterfeit money or checks,
and most times the person with the fake money is unaware of it,†he said.
Kwon agreed, adding he has reported counterfeit bills in the past, but
the customer is usually as surprised as he is and winds up paying with a
legal tender.
If found guilty, Raffaelli and LaRue face a maximum of up to 15 years
in prison for conspiracy to manufacture and pass counterfeit currency.
Raffaelli is also charged with attempting to pass counterfeit money,
which also carries a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.