The Sentinel-Record

Retailer charged with hoarding, gouging

- JIM MUSTIAN

NEW YORK — Federal prosecutor­s charged a New York retailer Friday with hoarding tons of disposable masks, surgical gowns and hand sanitizer in a Long Island warehouse and selling the items at huge markups.

Amardeep “Bobby” Singh, 45, was charged with violating the Defense Production Act of 1950 in what authoritie­s described as the first such prosecutio­n during the coronaviru­s pandemic.

Singh is expected to surrender to authoritie­s next week in the case around what is known as personal protective equipment, which has become a hot commodity during the outbreak.

Singh’s attorney, Bradley Gerstman, called the charges “most- ly fiction” and said the complaint misstated his client’s costs.

“If selling PPE goods is improper or criminal, then a lot of people need to go to jail,” Gerstman said in a telephone interview. “The Defense Production Act is wildly vague, and I don’t think this would pass muster

on any appellate level. I think this statute would be struck down as null and void.”

The charges come more than a month after President Donald Trump issued an executive order making it illegal to hoard scarce medical supplies or sell personal protective equipment at inflated prices.

“Singh’s amassing of critical personal protective equipment during a public health crisis and reselling at huge markups places him squarely in the crosshairs of law enforcemen­t armed with the Defense Production Act,” Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Richard Donoghue said in a written statement.

Singh sells sneakers and apparel at his Plainview store, prosecutor­s said, but dedicated a new section last month to “COVID-19 Essentials,” including N95 masks, face shields, gloves and disinfecti­ng products.

In late March and early April, authoritie­s said, Singh stockpiled more than 1.6 tons of disposable masks; 2.2 tons of surgical gowns; 1.8 tons of hand sanitizer and seven shipments of digital thermomete­rs.

Records from the store showed he bought the face masks for 7 cents apiece and then resold them for $1 each, prosecutor­s said.

A search of his business and warehouse turned up more than 5,000 face shields, 2,471 full-body isolation suits and 711,400 disposable vinyl gloves, according to court records.

Authoritie­s said Singh marketed the products on social media and continued selling them even after he received a cease-anddesist letter from the New York Attorney General’s Office, which called his pricing “unconscion­ably excessive.”

Singh’s stockpiles for now are being held as evidence, but the Federal Emergency Management Agency is “working through the details” of how to reallocate the materials to institutio­ns in need of such equipment, said a law enforcemen­t official familiar with the matter. The person wasn’t authorized to speak publicly about the materials and spoke on the condition of anonymity.

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