January 06, 2005
Russian Mafia Comes To Upstate New York
By Eugene Girin
Late last summer, residents of
western New York found out that, thanks to flawed
U.S. immigration policies the notorious
Russian mafia had established a foothold in their
region.
Russian immigrant
Robert Stein—real name is Mikhail Solovey—was
arrested by
federal agents at Buffalo Niagara International
Airport while trying to flee the country. Solovey lived
in America for ten years (his last residence was in East
Amherst, New York, a suburb of Buffalo) and holds
American citizenship (hopefully, not for much longer).
He and another Russian immigrant, Serge Ivanov were
indicted in New York and California for defrauding the
federal government of almost $1.7 million.
Solovey is also accused of threatening a witness in
Buffalo.
Solovey and another Russian immigrant opened a computer
training school in California. The school had no
students and the defendants created fake student
accounts and submitted
fraudulent student loan applications to the
Department of Education.
In addition, the US authorities found out that Solovey
was a member of a violent
Russian gang, nicknamed
the Kurganskaya. According to Russian authorities,
Mikhail Solovey is a suspect in a kidnapping and murder
committed in the Russian Federation in 1999.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Brett Harvey said that Solovey
is a
dangerous man and the federal magistrate refused to
release him on bail.
The Solovey case demolishes the cheap "perfectly-law-abiding
immigrant-entrepreneur"
myth that is tirelessly peddled by the open borders
lobby. But the case also shows the dangerous
incompetence of American immigration authorities and the
gross ineffectiveness of screening procedures applied to
immigrants.
Most likely, Solovey came to America by
posing as a Jewish victim of Soviet anti-Semitism.
This explains why he changed his name from the Slavic
“Mikhail Solovey” to the Semitic “Robert Stein.”
As I have outlined
elsewhere, hundreds of thousands of Russians and
Ukrainians used fraudulent documents to pose as Jews in
order to get into the U.S and
Israel Dozens if not hundreds of them have turned
out to be street thugs,
outlaws, and even
neo-Nazis (in Israel!) .
The simple fact is that the U.S. has enough
homegrown American criminals. The last thing it
needs is to import
foreign ones.
It’s about time American authorities and lawmakers
removed their
politically-correct spectacles and started putting
the interests of their own people first.
Eugene Girin [email
him] immigrated (legally!) from the Republic of Moldova
in 1994 at the age of 10. He is currently studying
political science in Rochester, New York.