Crime & Safety
Burglar In Multimillion Dollar Spree That Hit Somerset County Homes Sentenced
The multi million-dollar, multi-state burglary spree targeted homes in affluent neighborhoods across NJ including in Somerset County: AG

SOMERSET COUNTY, NJ — A Brooklyn, NY man was sentenced Tuesday in connection with a multimillion-dollar, multi-state burglary spree that included homes in Somerset County, U.S. Attorney Paul J. Fishman announced.
Anthony “T.J.” Hanks, 37 was convicted in November 2015 of one count of conspiracy
to transport stolen property in interstate commerce and three counts of interstate transportation of
stolen property; his cousin, Daniel “Tokyo” Gatson, 44, was also convicted of conspiracy to
transport stolen property in interstate commerce and 11 counts of interstate transportation of
stolen property.
District Judge William J. Martini sentenced Hanks to one year and one day in prison on Tuesday following a three-week trial in Newark federal court.
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The burglary spree, led by Gatson, included 27 burglaries and attempted burglaries in six states, including in Warren and Bernardsville in Somerset County and stealing $3.4 million in cash and valuables, according to documents filed in this case and the evidence at trial.
Somerset County burglaries included:
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- On Dec. 1, 2012 Gaston and others burglarized a home on Hilltop Road in Warren Townshipstealing more than $1.2 million in cash and jewelry;
- On Jan. 31, 2013 Gaston and others burglarized a home on White Buck Run in Warren Township;
- On Sept. 19, 2013 Gaston and others burglarized a home on Greiger in Warren Township stealing about $92,000 in jewelry;
- On Sept. 25, 2013 Gaston, Hanks and others burglarized a home on Charlotte Hill Drive in Bernardsville stealing more than $6,000 in jewelry.
Burglaries also occurred across New Jersey in affluent neighborhoods in Bergen, Essex, Middlesex, Morris, and Monmouth counties.
Hanks, Gatson and others would pick out homes in affluent residential neighborhoods and conduct surveillance of the target residences, looking for indications that no one was home, according to court documents.
They would then cut wires running to and from the home — including phone, cable, and alarm connections — then, while wearing masks and gloves, they would forcibly break in, usually by smashing through the front door, while a getaway driver remained nearby in a rented minivan, often maintaining contact with one of the burglars inside the target residence by cell phone, according to court documents.
In addition to the prison term, Judge Martini sentenced Hanks to three years of supervised release and ordered to pay $2.1 million in restitution. Gatson was sentenced in June 2016 to 25 years in prison.
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