Thursday, January 27, 2011

Kai Patterson Thanked By NYC Housing Authority For Preventing A $1.5 Million Fraud Scheme

The New York City Housing Authority Confirms That Frank Del Vecchio And Thomas Belesis Attempted To Commit Fraud Against NYCHA For 1.5 Million Dollars.


NYCHA Announcement Of $1.5 Million
The President of the Citywide Council Presidents for the New York City Housing Authority (NYCHA) confirms that Frank Del Vecchio and Thomas Belesis attempted to defraud the New York City Housing Authority 1.5 Million Dollars in his thank you letter to Kai D. Patterson, who was the former CEO of the company.  The thank you letter was addressed to Kai Patterson for preventing the New York City Housing Authority from being defrauded.  Mr. Patterson designed and created the AMBER Ready Program, which was the first child safety application to enable parents to create and store their children's missing alert profiles in parent's wireless phones. Once a child became missing with the AMBER Ready Program, a parent could call police and the police officer could transmit the missing child's profile to their police headquarters while conducting the search for the child. The missing child's profile could be disseminated to police cars, other police departments and the general public through the AMBER Alert program in minutes, instead of hours that it currently takes.  At the AMBER Ready Child Safety Back-to-School Times Square Event that AMBER Ready hosted, the New York City Housing Authority pledged to purchase 30,000 subscriptions of the AMBER Ready Program, at $1,500,000 to allow housing authority parents to receive the program at no cost (See: https://bit.ly/3dy0VSU). 

Frank Del Vecchio
Shortly after the Times Square event in August of 2009, Mr. Patterson was fired as the CEO of the company by Frank Del Vecchio, who falsified documents to arrange for Mr. Patterson's termination from the company he created and built from his concept to protect children. After Mr. Patterson was terminated, Mr. Del Vecchio became the CEO of AMBER Ready and hired Shining Star Web Strategies to redevelop the company's mobile phone child safety application. When Shining Star Web Stratagies was unable to reproduce the application, Mr. Del Vecchio told the employees of the company to not divulged the mobile phone application no longer existed, said former employee Robert Schechter.  Mr. Schechter was also a retired New York City Police Officer, and worked for the company when Mr. Patterson was terminated (See:
 Former Employee Letter To Confirm Fraud). Prior to Mr. Patterson's termination, he setup a program to receive copies of Mr. Del Vecchio's e-mails to confirm Mr. Del Vecchio, Thomas Belesis and other members of AMBER Ready's Board of Directors were plotting to terminate him. After Mr. Patterson was terminated, Mr. Del Vecchio was promoted to CEO and Milton Makris was hired as the COO of the Company. Mr. Makris was the uncle of Thomas Belesis, who was the President of John Thomas Financial that raised more than $15 million dollars from private investors for the company.  After Mr. Patterson was terminated, he continued to receive Mr. Del Vecchio's e-mails that confirmed Mr. Del Vecchio, Thomas Belesis and Milton Makris were attempting to get the New York City Housing Authority to issue the $1,500,000 check to AMBER Ready for the mobile phone child safety application the company could no longer deliver. The e-mails received by Mr. Patterson also confirmed that Frank Del Vecchio, Thomas Belesis and Milton Makris were going to blame Mr. Patterson for the company's new application not working after receiving the check from the Housing Authority (See: Del Vecchio's E-Mail To Defraud and Makris' E-Mail To Defraud).

Launch Of With President Of FLEOA
After receiving copies of the e-mails sent to Mr. Del Vecchio to confirm an attempt to defraud the Housing Authority was being hatched that would make Mr. Patterson appear to have committed the fraud, Mr. Patterson secretly notified the Housing Authority and made them aware of the scheme. Mr. Patterson also sent the Housing Authority along with several other organization documents to confirm that Blinglets had filed a lawsuit against AMBER Ready and Shining Star Web Strategies' new mobile phone application did not work (See: Lawsuit). Mr. Patterson also told the Housing Authority that he was falsely terminated for not partaking in a scheme to defraud the company's investors. Mr. Del Vecchio had issued stock certificates to John Thomas Bridge and Opportunity Fund to dilute the other shareholders of the company by forging Mr. Patterson's signature on the stock certificates.  More than 50 million shares were issued with Mr. Patterson's forged signature to John Thomas Financial's subsidiary and other investors.  After notifying the Housing Authority of the scheme, Mr. Patterson also notified the Federal Law Enforcement Officers Association (FLEOA), National Organization of Black Law Enforcement Executives (NOBLE), National PTA and Mothers Against Drunk Driving, who had committed to purchase or sell the AMBER Ready Application while Mr. Patterson was the CEO of the Company. "I did not want to see these organizations be defrauded by AMBER Ready, while I became the scapegoat," said Mr. Patterson. While Mr. Patterson was the CEO of the Company, the mobile phone child safety application did work, was tested and was certified through a third party mobile phone testing program with a company called Device Anywhere (See: Endorsement).

The letter sent to Mr. Patterson from the Housing Authority also confirms that AMBER Ready plotted to terminate Mr. Patterson several months before Mr. Del Vecchio falsified documents to arrange for Mr. Patterson's termination. In an attempt to prepare the Housing Authority for Mr. Patterson's termination, Fred Brown told the Housing Authority . Mr. Brown told the President of the President Council that Mr. Patterson was going to be terminated in May of 2009 and on the evening of the launch of the Times Square Event, which was after the Housing Authority executed the order to purchase the program. A week after the order was executed in August of 2009, a document was created by Mr. Del Vecchio to allege the past due salary that Mr. Patterson paid himself in April of 2009, was misappropriated. The document that was created by Mr. Del Vecchio was cut into thin strips and made to appear they were taken out of a shredder that was in Mr. Patterson's office. The document consisted of a wire form and an e-mail. The falsified document that was cut into strips were cut too thick to have come from the shredder according to Mr. Patterson. Mr. Del Vecchio also hired a private investigator to certify the documents were authentic, but the document contained a typo in Mr. Patterson's e-mail address, which was mistyped as kap@amberalertsafety.com, when Mr. Patterson's correct e-mail address was kdp@amberready.com. Mr. Del Vecchio was also not aware the shredder had been broken for almost 2 years, which was confirmed by two other former employees of the company (See: Employee E-Mail Confirmation and Employee E-Mail Confirmation).

Thomas Belesis
All of the documents confirm that Mr. Del Vecchio, Thomas Belesis and Milton Makris participated in the scheme to defraud the Housing Authority have been turned over to US Federal Authorities. According to several former employees, Mr. Del Vecchio attempted to defraud several other law enforcement agencies by using his position as the Deputy Police Chief to persuade other law enforcement agencies to purchase an application that did not work. When Mr. Del Vecchio was promoted to CEO of AMBER Ready after arranging form Mr. Patterson's termination, he was given a raise from $100,000 per year to $340,000 per year with additional compensations. Mr. Del Vecchio used his influence as Bergen County's form Director of Public Safety to persuade Bergen County Sheriff to purchase the nonworking mobile phone application. The Bergen County Sheriff's Office, in New Jersey purchased the application for Bergen County parents before learning the mobile phone application did not work.  Mr. Del Vecchio was the new appointed CEO AMBER Ready and current Deputy Police Chief of Fairview, New Jersey at the time of the purchase.  Mr. Del Vecchio sold the Bergen County Sheriff's Department the nonworking application, before confessing the mobile phone application did not work in a deposition while under oath in the Blinglets litigation, which was recently settled for $650,000 by AMBER Ready.  Mr. Del Vecchio was issued a citation award by Sheriff McGuire, which was posted on the Internet in August of 2010, yet finally admitted the application did not work in a deposition on June 24, 2010 while under oath (See: Page 82).  

See: County Parent LetterAnnouncement and Settlement

Mr. Del Vecchio and Mr. Belesis attempted to implement a scheme to defraud the New York City Housing Authority, police departments and several child safety organization, while attempting to also commit securities fraud. AMBER Ready has finally been shut down by the company that was defrauded into purchasing the company in a merger. In April of 2010, CK-41 entered into a merger with AMBER Ready to form the company Galaxy Media and Marketing (See: http://bit.ly/2lBkX55). CK-41 was not told by Frank Del Vecchio the company's mobile phone application did not work, nor was the company told of the numerous acts of fraud committed by Mr. Del Vecchio and others associated with the company after Mr. Patterson was terminated. "It seems like we've been getting a new lawsuit every other week from AMBER Ready," said a member of Galaxy Media and Marketing.  The new company has settled the lawsuits of Blinglets, the Terrie William Agency, but has recently received a lawsuit from ABC Studios because Mr. Del Vecchio failed to pay for the Times Square Event. AMBER Ready did not disclose proper amount of the past due liability before the merger. Apparently this story is going to take a new twist now that U.S. Federal Authorities are evolved and new lawsuits have emerged.

By: A Former AMBER Ready Employee

P.S.

Since this information was posted, John Thomas Financial was been charged with fraud by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and FINRA (See: Fraud Charges), Frank Del Vecchio has stepped down as CEO, AMBER Ready's succor company Galaxy Media and Marketing Corp has Shutdown, and John Thomas Financial has shutdown. With the help of several former AMBER Ready employees, the more than 35 million shares Frank Del Vecchio issued to John Thomas Financial's hedge fund, which they intended to dump on the market at $10 per share, was prevented by the SEC. CNBC has also recently produced a television story called "Greed and Fraud" that exposed the fraud committed by John Thomas Financial, which was committed with the help of now Fairview Police Chief Frank Del Vecchio (See: NBC Fraud & Greed).

George Jarkesy
John Thomas Financial was eventually shutdown by U.S. Federal Authorities (See: Shutdown), and Mr. Belesis was stripped of his license to operate as a securities broker (See: Fraud Charges).  In addition, the Securities And Exchange Commission has also successfully prosecuted Thomas Belesis and his partner George Jarkesy for committing fraud against Kai Patterson and AMBER Ready, which is the company that Patterson founded (See: SEC Charges SEC Conviction). Thomas Belesis was also bared from ever operating as an investment banker again for the fraud that he committed against Kai Patterson and his company AMBER Ready (See: Disbarment).  Although Mr. Del Vecchio admitted to committing felony fraud, by admitting AMBER Ready had no mobile phone application while attempting to collect $1.5 million from the New York City Housing Authority, he was never charged with fraud. He also admitting to committing another felony when he lied in the 2009 registration statement and in the 2010 amendment  that he filed with the SEC by saying AMBER Ready had 4,000 subscription (See: Page 26 - Market Analysis, and  Page 28 - Market Analysis), then said AMBER Ready had 600 enrollments, but their staff members said the company had less than 300 enrollments, and their financials filed in the registration statement.  Since Mr. Del Vecchio was a police chief, and it's been confirmed in a House Judiciary Hearing before Congress that federal and state agencies will not prosecute police officers who commit crimes, and agents will testify on behalf of police officers who commit crimes (Video: Congressional Hearing) under the Blue Wall Of Silence, it's very unlikely he will ever be charged.

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