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Authorities Charge 8 With Stealing Cases Of Beer From Train Cars

Micheal Chukwuebuka, Reporting 

FEDERAL authorities have charged eight men with stealing numerous cases of beer from train cars and other facilities across the Northeast over the course of nearly two years.

Prosecutors with the Southern District of New York (SDNY), on Wednesday, said that the men carried out dozens of beer heists in New York, New Jersey, Connecticut and Massachusetts between about July 2022 and March 2024, costing beverage distributors at least hundreds of thousands of dollars.

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According to the SDNY complaint, under cover of darkness, the men would usually gather in the Bronx, then set out for a given night’s target.

Once they arrived, they’d usually cut a hole in a fence surrounding the location, and/or cut the lock to railroad cars, to access sealed pallets of cases of beer, usually Coronoa or Modelo shipped in from Mexico.

Once brought back to a gathering point in the Bronx, the men would inspect the cases and subsequently sell them.

Prosecutors said the heist teams were paid hundreds of dollars for a given night’s work.

Jose Cesari, one of the charged men accused of being a leader, known as “Cry,” would post on Instagram seeking recruits for the ring, advertising the ability to make “$100K+ in a month” by following what he described as “the beer train method.”

Cesari, according to the complaint, is also accused of using a police scanner to monitor potential police activity, and was found to be in possession of a firearm that he brandished.

The men face seven federal criminal counts, including charges under the 1946 Hobbs Act governing interference with interstate commerce, equating to decades of prison time.

“Train heists harken back to the days of the Wild West and gunslingers riding horses, stealing loot from rail cars.

“The romanticized image has nothing to do with the modern-day criminals we allege took part in a theft ring in New Jersey, New York, and beyond that targeted railyards and beverage distribution centers,” FBI Special Agent in Charge James E. Dennehy said in a statement.

A spokesperson for rail group CSX, which owns one of the railyards targeted by the suspects, also issued a statement:

 “CSX is committed to protecting the safety of its property and that of its customers. We take criminal activity very seriously. Railyards are privately owned property and unauthorized activity is considered criminal trespassing and violators will be prosecuted.”

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