Posts tagged New York
Bingo! Uptown gaming halls attracting younger and often unemployed crowd to regular games
1Bingo! Uptown gaming halls attracting younger and often unemployed crowd to regular games.
BY Laignee Barron
DAILY NEWS WRITER
Bingo is catching on big time uptown – where younger, often unemployed players are filling halls around the clock.
The stakes are big: With $1,000 to $3,000 jackpots and frequent payouts, two uptown bingo parlors have commercialized the game, cashing in on gamble-happy crowds desperate to make an extra buck.
“I pay my bills with bingo,” said Harlem resident Sharon Brown, 44, who has played bingo for nearly a decade and is currently a regular at West Side Hall Inc. on 125th St.
Since she was laid off from her job as an administrative assistant two years ago, Brown plays three to four times a week until late at night renting a $25 computer board in hopes of winning the jackpot.
Last month, she won a $2,000 prize, which she said she used to pay her gas bill and part of her rent.
“The payout is good,” said Brown, adding she knows it’s not the best way to solve her financial problems. “Bingo is gambling. It’s fun, but it’s a bad habit.”
While old-time bingo players still fill church basements uptown, establishments like West Side Hall and Washington Heights Arcade Inc., licensed and incorporated under state law, have lately been attracting a younger crowd, opening at noon and closing when the games are finished – often not until 10 p.m.
“In the last few years we’ve seen people a little younger mixing in and becoming regular players,” said West Side owner Belle Fisch, who has been in the bingo business for 20 years. “It’s a therapy for some. For others, it’s an economic thing.”
Fisch said the hall’s Saturday night games increasingly appeal to young couples – even with its banana-yellow walls and chipped fold-out tables.
“It’s a cheap, fun date,” she said. “If someone wants to try their luck and play a game, it’s a lot less expensive than a casino.”
A similar shift in clientele is also happening at Washington Heights Arcade Inc., located underground in the 181st Street IRT subway station.
“Down here it’s a whole other world most people don’t know of,” said Margaret Porfidio, 69, who plays bingo at Arcade every day with her husband. “It’s mostly senior citizens but, at the end of the month, the age drops off.
Maybe the Social Security check runs out.”
Porfidio warned against relying on gambling for money.
“If you have to depend on bingo to pay rent or buy groceries that’s a bad idea, although you have to do what you have to do,” she said. “I pay all my bills before I come here.”
Washington Heights local and public elementary school teacher Maria Gruriom, 31, knows her chances of winning bingo are slim.
Still, she plays at Arcade on her days off, hoping to snag a prize like she did two years ago, claiming $800 after just one round. “You play to win. And if you win you can pay back bills,” she said. “It doesn’t happen often, but it makes playing often worth it.”
No matter why they play, bingo addicts said it’s easy to get hooked, and wind up gambling away a pretty penny.
“It’s just like in the casino,” said Porfidio, “the only real winner at the end of the day is the casino owner.”
Last call for bingo at Notre Dame
1Last call for bingo at Notre Dame – Utica, NY – The Observer-Dispatch, Utica, New York.
Last weekend for bingo in Utica, NY’s Notre Dame Junior-Senior high school.
Couple mum at hearing over stolen bingo funds
0Pocono Record
A Matamoras, Pa., couple accused of taking more than $68,000 from the Matamoras Fire Department bingo fund were mostly expressionless at their preliminary hearing Wednesday.
Former fire Chief Kevin DeGroat and his wife, former department treasurer Theresa DeGroat, occasionally whispered to each other and wrote notes on a yellow pad while their attorney, Robert Bernathy, wrestled with evidence, including a stack of Sam’s Club receipts presented by Pike County Assistant District Attorney Bruce DeSarro.
The couple, accused of taking money in several ways, were charged with theft in December.
Bingo money was used at Sam’s Club in the Town of Wallkill, N.Y., to purchase personal household items totaling some $2,800, authorities said.
Theresa DeGroat admitted to opening sealed money bags from the bingo games, changing the deposit slip and writing out a new one to be deposited in the bank, according to court documents and testimony by Eastern Pike Regional Police Sgt. David Zegarski .
Both Zegarski and Eric Stewart, the assistant police chief and a member of the fire department, testified that during questioning, Theresa DeGroat threw out a lot of names of people who should also be investigated for theft of fire department funds.
Theresa DeGroat “tried to minimize it,” Stewart told the court. “She said they (the DeGroats) are not the only ones who did it and that is a common practice in the fire department.” No one else has been charged in the thefts.
Two new charges were filed at Wednesday’s hearing; criminal conspiracy to commit charge of theft, and misappropriation of government property or government funds.
Magisterial District Judge Deborah Fisher found enough evidence to hold the case for trial.
Guilty Pleas in Greek Orthodox Church Bingo Scam
1This article originally appeared here.
The “crying numbers” for this Bingo-scam trio aren’t I9 or G12 — it’s a cool $830,000.
Three Queens residents plead guilty to a nearly $1 million Bingo scheme run out of a local Green Orthodox Church on Jackson Avenue.
Spiros Moshopoulos, 62, Tommy Skiada, 49 and Daniella Radulescu, 46, promised Bingo entheusasists that their cash was going toward chartiable works — that were eventually revealed to be inactive — but they instead pocketed every dime.
The grand larceny charges from the plea deal mean the trio will only get hit with three-year conditional discarge, as long as they stay clean.
Moshopoulos and Radulescu, a church officer, were facing 15 years in prison for the 714-count indictment will be sentenced on April 6.
Moshopoulos forfeited $1,000,000 —including the stolen charitable bingo funds and an additional $170,000 as restitution— and agreed to a lifetime ban from any licensed bingo activity and will dissolve his corporation.
Skiada and Radulescu will also surrender their bingo licenses as part of the conditions of the plea.
Three people arrested in church bingo scam
0Article from the WABC website about church scam in New York. Click link to read original article
Three people arrested in church bingo scam.
QUEENS (WABC) — Three people have been charged in a church bingo scam that netted hundreds of thousands of dollars, prosecutors said.
“The defendants are accused of duping the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America into allowing them to run a bingo hall whose profits were supposed to go to specific charitable causes,” Queens District Attorney Richard Brown said. “Instead of doing God’s work, however, the defendants are alleged to have lined their own pockets with hundreds of thousands of dollars belonging to the charities.”
Spiros Moshopoulos, 62, of Little Neck, Queens; Tommy Skiada, 49, of Astoria, Queens; and Daniella Radulescu, 46, of Astoria, Queens are facing numerous charges of larceny, money laundering and illegal gambling in connection with the scam. Moshopoulos’ corporation, Spimos Enterprises Inc. in Jackson Heights, is also named in the 714-count indictment.
They are accused of operating a licensed bingo hall and using licensed charitable organizations as a front to steal approximately $830,000 between January 2007 and February 2010.
The bingo hall was located at 82-18 Northern Boulevard in Jackson Heights. The games were allegedly operated in the name of various inactive charities under the umbrella of the Romanian Orthodox Church of Sts. Constantine & Helen, located at 25-27 23rd Street, which is under the direct canonical supervision of the Greek Orthodox Archdiocese of America.
Prosecutors said they obtained the licenses illegally and used the charities as a front to siphon monies from the gaming for their own profit. Bingo games were allegedly conducted daily at the location by people posing as members of various charities.
The defendants are also accused of cheating the New York City Department of Consumer Affairs out of approximately $20,000 in fees.
“This indictment sends a loud and clear message that unscrupulous activity in the name of registered charitable and religious organizations has serious consequences – including prison time. The bingo licensing law was enacted to protect charitable gaming funds from being misappropriated and looted,” Wagering Board Chairman John Sabini said.
The defendants were arrested Wednesday morning.
Underground Rebel Bingo Club
0A British Bingo Sensation Looks for a Home in New York
The above link takes you to a New York Times article about a new way that bingo is being played. Definitely NOT your Grandma’s Bingo game! Tell us what you think of the idea in the comments. Also, if you have played let us know your thoughts as well!
The group has a website as well. You can find it here: www.rebelbingo.com
North Fork – Bingo at Noon on Tuesdays
0A hand painted bingo sign from Long Island New York. Let us know if you have ever played here! You can send your bingo pictures to bigbad@bigbadbingoblog.com.



