Levy Izhak Rosenbaum Pleads Guilty To Selling Black Market Kidneys

SAMANTHA HENRY and DAVID PORTER   10/27/11 05:35 PM ET   AP

TRENTON, N.J. — A New York man pleaded guilty Thursday to what experts said was the first ever proven case of black-market organ trafficking in the United States.

Levy Izhak Rosenbaum admitted in federal court in Trenton that he had brokered three illegal kidney transplants for New Jersey-based customers in exchange for payments of $120,000 or more. He also pleaded guilty to one count of conspiracy to broker an illegal kidney sale.

His attorneys, Ronald Kleinberg and Richard Finkel, said in a statement that their client had performed a life-saving service for desperately ill people who had been languishing on official transplant waiting lists.

"The transplants were successful and the donors and recipients are now leading full and healthy lives," the statement said. "In fact, because of the transplants and for the first time in many years, the recipients are no longer burdened by the medical and substantial health dangers associated with dialysis and kidney failure."

The lawyers added that Rosenbaum had never solicited clients, but that recipients had sought him out, and that the donors he arranged to give up kidneys were fully aware of what they were doing. The money involved, they argued, was for expenses associated with the procedures, which they claim were performed in prestigious American hospitals by experienced surgeons and transplant experts. The lawyers did not name the hospitals involved, nor are they named in court documents.

Prosecutors argued that Rosenbaum was fully aware he was running an illicit and profitable operation – buying organs from vulnerable people in Israel for $10,000, and selling them to desperate, wealthy American patients.

"A black market in human organs is not only a grave threat to public health, it reserves lifesaving treatment for those who can best afford it at the expense of those who cannot," said New Jersey's U.S. Attorney, Paul Fishman. "We will not tolerate such an affront to human dignity."

Each of the four counts carries a maximum five-year prison sentence plus a fine of up to $250,000. Rosenbaum also agreed to forfeit $420,000 in real or personal property that was derived from the illegal kidney sales.

The 60-year-old Rosenbaum is a member of the Orthodox Jewish community in the Borough Park section of Brooklyn, where he had told neighbors he was in the construction business.

He was arrested in July 2009 in a sweeping federal case that became the largest corruption sting in New Jersey history. Though he was one of more than 40 people arrested, including politicians and rabbis in New Jersey and Brooklyn, and was not a rabbi himself, the image of rabbis illegally selling kidneys garnered international headlines and made its way into the routines of late-night comedians for weeks afterward.

Rosenbaum was arrested after he tried to set up a kidney sale to a man posing as a crooked businessman but who actually was government informant Solomon Dwek, a disgraced real estate speculator facing prison time for a $50 million bank fraud.

Dwek, wearing a wire for federal investigators, brought Rosenbaum an undercover FBI agent posing as his secretary, who claimed to be searching for a kidney for a sick uncle on dialysis who was on a transplant list at a Philadelphia hospital.

"I am what you call a matchmaker," Rosenbaum said in a secretly recorded conversation. "I bring a guy (who) I believe, he's suitable for your uncle."

Asked how many organs he had brokered, he said: "Quite a lot," the most recent two weeks earlier.

For someone who was not a surgeon, Rosenbaum seemed in his recorded conversations to have a thorough knowledge of the ins and outs of kidney donations, including how to fool hospitals into believing the donor was acting solely out of compassion for a friend or loved one.

He was recorded saying that money had to be spread around liberally, to Israeli doctors, visa preparers and those who cared for the organ donors in this country. "One of the reasons it's so expensive is because you have to shmear (pay others) all the time," he was quoted as saying.

"So far, I've never had a failure," he bragged on tape. "I'm doing this a long time."

At a 2008 meeting with the undercover agent, Rosenbaum claimed he had an associate who worked for an insurance company in Brooklyn who could take the recipient's blood samples, store them on dry ice and send them to Israel, where they would be tested to see if they matched the prospective donor, authorities said. Donors would then be brought from Israel and undergo surgery to remove the kidney in a U.S. hospital, according to court documents.

Although the hospitals where the operations Rosenbaum arranged have not been named, critics and experts on organ trafficking say many U.S. hospitals do not have vigorous enough procedures for looking into the source of the organs they transplant because such operations are lucrative.

Despite guidelines from various groups and Medicare, U.S. transplant centers are mostly free to write their own rules for screening donors to make sure they are not selling their organs. The questions they ask vary widely. Some hospitals require long waiting periods to weed out shady donors; others don't.

Under 1984 federal law, it is illegal for anyone to knowingly buy or sell organs for transplant. The practice is illegal just about everywhere else in the world, too.

But demand for kidneys far outstrips the supply, with 4,540 people dying in the U.S. last year while waiting for a kidney, according to the United Network for Organ Sharing. As a result, there is a thriving black market for kidneys around the world.

Art Caplan, the director of the Center for Bioethics at the University of Pennsylvania and a co-chairman of a United Nations task force on organ trafficking, said kidneys are the most common of all trafficked organs because they can be harvested from live donors, unlike other organs. He said Rosenbaum had pleaded guilty to one of the "most heinous crimes against another human being."

"Internationally, about one quarter of all kidneys appear to be trafficked," Caplan said. "But until this case, it had not been a crime recognized as reaching the United States."

___

Porter reported from Newark.

___

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TRENTON, N.J. — A New York man pleaded guilty Thursday to what experts said was the first ever proven case of black-market organ trafficking in the United States. Levy Izhak Rosenbaum admitted ...
TRENTON, N.J. — A New York man pleaded guilty Thursday to what experts said was the first ever proven case of black-market organ trafficking in the United States. Levy Izhak Rosenbaum admitted ...
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12:18 PM on 10/28/2011
Who did these organs come from? Where they stolen?
08:16 AM on 10/28/2011
So happy this creep is going to jail my husband is waiting for a kidney so the fact that someone could afford $120,000 to go around the system is especially egregious. The way to stop organ trafficking is to Donate Life ! So please folks sign up to be organ donors.
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Rachelvis
There is a difference between "your" and "you're".
11:58 AM on 10/28/2011
They aren't going around the system. They aren't paying money to get to the front of any list. They are buying something that WOULDN'T otherwise be available. It's not like if they didn't buy it, your husband would get that specific kidney.
Wishes for a speedy recovery.
03:02 PM on 10/29/2011
I've been in your shoes many years ago. My husband received a kidney from a cadaver. I couldn't give him mine because we are not the same blood type. Several years ago, doctors developed a new procedure to extract the kidney from the donor. It entails less cutting, so there is less recovery time for the donor.

Get your husband on as many transplant lists as you can. I recall seeing a program on 60 Minutes or Dateline about simultaneous kidney transplants involving several donors and recipients. Patient A's donor gave the kidney to Patient B. Patient B's donor gave the kidney to Patient C. Patient C's donor gave the kidney to Patient A. Ask your transplant center if there is such a program at that hospital.

Please don't give up hope. You and your husband will come through this together. My prayers are with you and your husband.
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kathy smelser
06:04 AM on 10/28/2011
the big montra from the far right wing has been that you are to do for yourself and not ask for help but now that people are selling there organs every one is getting upset YOU CANNOT have it both ways
10:22 PM on 10/27/2011
Perhaps time to end that dumb law and allow donors, under due safeguards and regulation, to get compensated fairly.
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12:35 AM on 11/04/2011
It's not a dumb law to keep organs in the hands of only legitimate donors via designated system of volunteer organ donors instead of sale to the highest bidder. To commercialize it would end the current system where the non-wealthy can receive organs from those who are very generous and usually in death. These crooks have a culture that pathetically only understands life through the prism of a dollar sign, and only when much of it is coming their way. They don't begin to understand charity or generosity. Are they ever organ donors?
08:41 PM on 10/27/2011
and in 50 or 100 years when people bring this up they will be accused of "blood libel".
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jeffp26
07:54 PM on 10/27/2011
Shylock would be proud.