Nassau DA: Garden City Construction Business Owner Charged with Insurance Fraud

LongIsland.com

Vassilios Handakas of Vector Structural Preservation, allegedly lied about number of workers and payroll to cheat insurance companies out of more than $235,000 in premiums.

Print Email
Nassau County District Attorney Anne T. Donnelly announced that a Garden City man has been charged with insurance fraud for allegedly underreporting payroll to insurance companies and cheating them out of $235,000 in premiums.
 
Vassilios Handakas, also known as William Handakas and Bill Handakas, 60, was arraigned before Judge Jaclene A. Agazarian on charges of Insurance Fraud in the Second Degree (a C felony), Insurance Fraud in the Third Degree (a D felony) and Workers’ Compensation Law 52(1)a & 52(1)d Effect of Failure to Secure Compensation on March 28, 2024. Handakas was released on his own recognizance and is due back in court on April 10, 2024. If convicted of the top charge, Handakas faces a potential maximum of 5 to 15 years in prison. 
 
“When an employer makes misrepresentations about the number of employees at their company and their payroll figures, they unfairly impact honest employers who bear the burden of insurance fraud in the form of higher premiums and workers who may suffer an injury just to find they have no protection through worker’s compensation coverage,” said DA Donnelly. “This defendant left his workers exposed and allegedly cheated insurance companies out of hundreds of thousands of dollars. I thank the New York State Inspector General’s Office for bringing this serious alleged fraud to my office for prosecution.”
 
“Employers must provide workers’ compensation insurance for all employees on payroll,” said New York State Inspector General Lucy Lang. “Failure to do so imperils a critical safety net that so many hardworking New Yorkers and their families need and deserve. My office will investigate and hold accountable anyone who would compromise this core commitment to workers.” 
 
DA Donnelly said that Vector Structural Corporation and Vassilios Handakos entered into a contract for a workers’ compensation policy with an insurance company for coverage between March 2019 and March 2020. In the application, the company allegedly indicated that it employed two masons with an annual payroll of $50,000 a year. Records the company and Handakas filed with the state, however, indicated that Vector had 13 employees during that time frame and a payroll of $625,466. The underreporting of the employees and payroll resulted in an underpayment of insurance premiums of $197,623.
 
In March 2020, Handakas and Vector allegedly repeated the underreporting of workers and payroll on its policy application with another insurance provider. The company claimed it had a payroll of $20,000, when the actual payroll according to state records was $106,452. The alleged underreporting resulted in a loss to the insurance carrier of $38,892.
 
The defendant surrendered to NCDA detective investigators on March 28, 2024. 
 
The case is being prosecuted by Senior Investigative Counsel and Attorney-in-Charge of Labor Richard Balletta of the Revenue, Auto, Insurance, and Labor Crime Bureau. Handakas is represent by Peter Menoudakos, Esq. 
 
The charges are merely accusations, and the defendant is presumed innocent until and unless found guilty.