Illicit Florida Gambling Operation Leads to Arrests, Seizure of Millions in Cash, Assets

Illicit Florida Gambling Operation Leads to Arrests, Seizure of Millions in Cash, Assets.

Costfoto / NurPhoto / Getty Images

Key Takeaways

A dozen suspects now face charges in after officials recently broke up an based in that operated in 10 locations.

Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. WatersJacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters, pictured above. Earlier this month he announced the breakup of a Florida gambling ring. (Image: YouTube)

Since 2021, the suspects provided such illicit games as fish tables, fire links, and assorted internet offerings, according to First Coast News.

263 Gambling Devices Confiscated

The investigation led to the seizure of 263 gambling devices, $2.5 million in cash, 15 vehicles valued at about $1.7M, two houses, as well as assorted jewelry and watches, authorities revealed.

The suspects also allegedly deposited proceeds from the gambling ring in almost a dozen accounts at banks and credit unions. The total balance reached hundreds of thousands of dollars, officials said.

One of the suspects, Robin Rukab Azzam, who’s accused of leading the operation, allegedly went to licensed gaming properties to merge the illicit money with legal funds. 

She was identified as a one-time city employee in Jacksonville by Jax Today. She also once attempted to get elected to the city council, the report added.

Azzam’s husband, George Azzam, ran the gambling operation with his wife, authorities said. Other defendants include Ryan Strickland, Derek Fleming, Majd Dabbas, Jerry Bass, Willbert Bannister, as well as other individuals who had a lesser role, the report said.

Several of the suspects were booked on racketeering and illegal gambling charges, and were in custody earlier this month at the Duval County jail, according to Jax Today.

The office of Florida Attorney General Ashley Moody filed a 32-page complaint on the case in Duval County court on December 11 following an inquiry by the Jacksonville Sheriff s Office and other agencies, that extended for about a year.

Operation Fish Chips

The investigation was called “Operation Fish Chips,” according to Florida TV station WJXT.

The gambling locations were also the sites of other crimes, including eight and 26 assaults, The report said. On October 3, a security guard was at one of the locations.

Several of the locations reportedly were shuttered by officials following the deadly shooting of the guard.

By shutting down these illegal gaming locations and seizing their criminal proceeds, we remove one accelerant that ignites violence in our community,” Jacksonville Sheriff T.K. Waters said during a press conference held earlier this month.

WJXT identified locations of the Jacksonville gambling ring as:

5354 Verna Boulevard4547 Shirley Avenue5331 Lenox Avenue1513 Lane Avenue734 Edgewood Avenue North5045 Soutel Drive4006 North Main Street8014 Lem Turner Road4578 Blanding Boulevard6530 San Juan Avenue

Article Sources
Melco Resorts Billionaire Lawrence Ho Predicts Japan Casino Bidding to Commence in 2019 editorial policy.
  1. Caesars Ups Term Loan to $2.5B, Wiping Out Some 2024, 2025 Debt

Compare Accounts
×
Premier League Teams Slammed by National Health Service for Not Pitching in on Gambling Programs
Provider
Name
Description
MGM Springfield August 24 Opening Has Law Enforcement on High Alert  Mohegan Sun Casino at Virgin Hotels Las Vegas Receives Gaming License  President Donald Trump Fires Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, Political Bettors Get It Right (Again)  UK Armed Robbery Gang that Laundered Money Through Fixed Odds Betting Terminals Sentenced  Las Vegas Raiders Stadium Budget Finalized at $1.8 Billion  BC Lottery Corp Denies Helping River Rock Casino Flout AML Laws  Downtown Las Vegas Goes Out on a Limb for New Treehouse Entertainment Complex  LVS To Plow $2 Billion into Macau Ops as License Renewal Looms  Former Bengal Vontaze Burfict Arrested in Quest for Secret Pizza at The Cosmopolitan  Golden Nugget Owner Tilman Fertitta Proposes Caesars Merger, Deal Could Oust CEO Mark Frissora