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arquitecto estafa a familias en Nueva Jersey /
Febrero 10, 2004
Recibió miles de dólares para demoler una
casa y desapareció sin construir la nueva.
aritza
and Scott Chesney met Antonio Bicca last summer when they were looking
for an architect and contractor to demolish their Woodbridge home
and build a new one.
Bicca
brought the blueprints for the home they imagined. His architect's
seal seemed real, his work plan, serious. He asked for half the
$194,000 budget up front and demolition started before Thanksgiving,
the couple said.
When
the house was gone, so was Bicca and the $124,000 the Chesneys gave
him, they said.
"We
have a debt, we don't have a house," Scott Chesney said recently
as he and his wife paced the frozen ground where their home once
stood in the township's Colonia section.
The
couple and their 8- and 6-year-old daughters now live in a relative's
basement.
The
Chesneys, whose case is being investigated by the Middlesex County
Prosecutor's Office, are not the first homeowners to claim Bicca
-- also known as Anthony Cezar Bicca or Cesar Bicca -- ripped them
off.
Bicca,
49, whose last known residence was in Summit, has been wanted in
Florida since 1995 on charges he did not complete home improvement
work for which he was paid. Four more New Jersey homeowners -- including
the wife of Byron Scott, the former Nets coach -- have accused Bicca
of similar scams in lawsuits or formal complaints. A similar claim
by an Orange County, N.Y., man put Bicca in jail for a few days
in November. And Clifton police want Bicca on identity theft and
forgery charges.
In
all, Bicca is accused of taking more than $218,000 for unfinished
jobs since 2001.
icca's
attorney, Filipe Pedroso of Newark, said in a written statement
that Bicca would not comment due to ongoing litigation.
"However,
Mr. Bicca does state that he has been in business for many years
and has always provided a high degree of quality service to his
customers," the attorney wrote.
Home
improvement generates the fourth-largest number of complaints, after
financial, auto- and Internet-related cases, state officials said.
The state received 2,600 complaints last year, according to the
state Division of Consumer Affairs.
Home
contractors are not required to be licensed in New Jersey.
But
a contractor demolishing a house and vanishing was new territory
for Madeleine Houston, an attorney who has worked on home-fraud
lawsuits for two decades, and Patrick O'Keefe, director of the New
Jersey Builders Association.
"I've
never heard something as bad as this, where a house was knocked
down. That's incredible," O'Keefe said.
Near
the end of January, Summit police went to Bicca's split-level house,
intending to arrest him on charges he had stolen a former employee's
ID and used it to buy an SUV and a truck in Clifton, police said.
But
all they found was a "For Sale" sign on the snow-covered
lawn.
Investigators
later questioned some of Bicca's relatives, but do not know where
he is, Clifton
olice
Detective Robert Bracken said. "We think he might have fled
the country," Bracken said.
Pedroso
last week declined to disclose Bicca's location. Several of Bicca's
alleged victims said they believe he is from Brazil.
Bicca
earned the trust of his clients with pictures of his work and a
flashy Web site, several people who sued him said. "Do you
want beauty, do you want durability, do you want the best?"
the Web site reads.
"He
was very nice, professional," said Michelle Widman, 29, of
South River, who hired Bicca in June 2002 to build a concrete patio
and paid him almost $5,700 in advance. Widman and her husband, Christopher,
sued because the work was incomplete and what was done was done
"so terribly I had to rip it up ... It was just a disaster."
Bicca
always visited homeowners instead of having them go to his Summit
office, his clients said. When Scott and Maritza Chesney drove to
his office address, they found a condo complex instead, they said.
They
soon found out, as well, that Bicca was not an architect. Jeff Lamm,
a spokesman for the Division of Consumer Affairs, confirmed Bicca
has never been licensed as an architect in New Jersey.
Bicca's
clients said the problems started when workers stopped showing up
at their homes or the work proved to be defective.
nita
Scott, wife of recently fired Nets coach Byron Scott, hired Bicca
in 2001 to build a new front entrance for the family's Livingston
home, according to a lawsuit she filed. But he did an unprofessional,
incomplete job, Anita Scott claimed in court documents.
"I
was forced to hire a new contractor ... to repair my property,"
she said in court papers, adding that she paid Bicca $4,500 and
had to come up with $2,500 more for the repairs.
Bicca
never responded to the complaint and final judgment was entered
against his company, Builder Corp., in January 2003. The Scotts
and their lawyer declined to comment.
The
most recent accusations against Bicca involved larger amounts of
money.
Maritza
Chesney's brother, Cesar Bartolo, told the Middlesex County Prosecutor's
Office that Bicca defrauded him out of $60,000. Bartolo's wife,
Berkys, said they hired Bicca based on the recommendation of their
relatives, who, at the time, were happy with the demolition work
he was doing for them.
Bicca
was arrested in Summit on Nov. 16, 2003, after Alfonso Macera, of
Monroe, N.Y., went to police claiming the contractor vanished with
$18,000 he had paid him. Monroe Police Detective Robert L. Compasso
said Bicca was accused of grand larceny and using a forged New Jersey
architect's seal. He was later transferred to the town of Haverstraw
in Rockland County on charges of writing bad checks, an Orange County
jail official said. He was released near the end of November.
he
second time Summit police tried to pick him up, Bicca was gone and
his house was on the market for $589,000.
Both
the Middlesex County Prosecutor's Office and the Orange County District
Attorney's Office have confirmed Bicca is under investigation, but
declined further comment.
Bicca's
former clients have either hired private investigators or tried
tracking him down themselves. Having paid Bicca $5,300 for a driveway
that "is falling apart," Nicholas Matarazzo of Montville
said he tracked Bicca to Summit last year and confronted him, demanding
repairs.
"He
promised to come," Matarazzo said, "and disappeared on
me."
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