Operation EM-EM put Mike Miske’s finances under a microscope

An FBI investigation launched in 2014 that led to the indictment of former Kamaaina Termite & Pest Control owner Mike Miske was dubbed “Operation EM-EM.”

The investigation was summarized in an initial document quoted by Miske’s attorneys last year in a series of court filings that unsuccessfully sought to suppress several search warrants and significant evidence they had produced.

According to Miske’s attorneys, citing records disclosed in discovery, the FBI’s Criminal Enterprise Squad launched Operation EM-EM on March 2, 2014, but it didn’t start from scratch.

The “new” investigation was “to re-focus on original subject of 245C-HN-20275, Mike Miske”, i.e.- the joint FBI/IRS/HPD Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force (OCDETF) investigation which had been opened in 2008, which the FBI had titled “Waimanalo Blues Miske, Michael.”

“Following the FBI’s opening of “Operation EM-EM” to re-focus on Miske, the IRS transferred custody of bank records collected during Waimanalo Blues to the FBI, including KTPC bank records from as early as May 2008, through at least October 2013, as well as bank records from Mr. Miske’s other businesses,” according to a reply filed by Miske’s attorneys on October 6, 2023.

As part of the earlier Waimanalo Blues investigation, the FBI made several controlled drug buys and wiretapped at least two telephones, “each for an initial 30-day period and a renewal,” but failed to implicate Miske in the drug trafficking.

The IRS also collected “at least 70 banker boxes of financial records involving Miske and his businesses,” which were turned over to Operation EM-EM.

A federal investigative grand jury began issuing subpoenas for financial information from Miske’s banks and financial advisors in 2014, at the same time federal investigators were actively developing confidential sources concerning Miske’s involvement in gambling, drug dealing, and extortion.

The dimensions of the financial side of the investigation is suggested by these initial subpoenas.

• December 2, 2014: A federal grand jury subpoena was issued to Central Pacific Bank for records of Michael J. Miske from October 1, 2013 to the present. The bank produced minimal records which included a signature card of one account, which ha been inactive, and a signature card and 14 pages of bank statements covering October 2013 through November 2014.

• December 2, 2014: A similar subpoena was issued to First Hawaiian Bank, which produced records of six accounts. Four accounts were in Miske’s name. On account was for Miske’s living trust, with trustees identified as his mother, Maydeen Stancil, and Edward Freitas, who was married to Miske’s cousin. Five of the accounts had been closed in September and October 2014.

• February 25, 2015: A grand jury subpoena was issued to American Express for records from the accounts of Leverage Inc; M Night Club the Row Bar; Kamaaina Termite & Pest; Kamaaina Rolloffs LLC, including merchant paid listings, merchant applications, and merchant case notes,

• February 25, 2015: A subpoena was served on Bank of Hawaii for all records from January 1, 2010 to the present relating to Mike Miske’s accounts, including signature cards, wire transfer, checks and withdrawals, all statements, loan applications, financial statement submitted by Miske, disbursements and payment records, and any notes or memoranda written by bank officials regarding the accounts, and all credit reports.

• February 25, 2015: Records regarding Kamaaina Termite’s contract to fumigate cabinets in hundreds of apartments in the Keola La’i Condominium were subpoenaed from Nordic/PCL Construction. The subpoena included all documents regarding payments, all checks or wire transfers between Nordic and Kamaaina Termite, all written communications (electronic or handwritten), all contracts and related files, and the contact information of anyone involved in the project that was still employed by Nordic.

The subpoena instructed: “Do not disclose to any person the fact that you have received or
complied with this subpoena because prior disclosure could impede the investigation being conducted by the grand jury.”

• February 25, 2015: A subpoena was issued to the accounting firm handling tax matters for Miske and his companies. The company produced emails by March 25, 2015, and additional records by April 24, 2015. The company said it could not produce document from QuickBooks in the Cloud due to the subpoena’s requirement for confidentiality.

• July 9, 2015: Intuit responded to a grand jury subpoena for cloned copies of the Quickbooks Online accounts of Leverage Inc., Oceans 808, and Hawaii Partners LLC.

An earlier subpoena to First Hawaiian Bank, issued on October 11, 2013, sought records for ten Miske companies from December 16, 2010 through the present, including records of savings accounts, checking accounts, loans, safety deposit boxes, and credit cards. “GAG ORDER” is stamped on the subpoena in large letters. No information was included about any records actually produced.

Kamaaina Holdings LLC
Kamaaina Holdings Inc.
Kamaaina Termite & Pest Control
Leverage Entertainment LLC
Leverage Inc.
Hawaii Partners LLC
Kamaaina Hauling LLC
Kamaaina Rolloffs LLC
Kamaaina Capital LLC
Kamaaina Solar Solutions LLC

In March 2018, Operation EM-EM was converted into an Organized Crime Drug Enforcement Task Force investigation involving multiple federal and local agencies, documents show.

This appears to have occurred after Wayne Miller, once considered Miske’s #1 associate, disclosed to investigators that Miske had allegedly financed a July 2014 attempted cocaine buy in California.

The cocaine deal had been broken up by federal drug agents and local police. Miller and another man, Michael Buntenbah, had been detained but quickly released.

Miske and Buntenbah were secretly indicted on drug trafficking charges in July 2019. The indictment remained sealed until July 2020, when a 22-count superseding indictment expanded the charges and added 9 additional co-defendants, along with Miske and Buntenbah.

Miller was charged separately and pleaded guilty in December 2020 to conspiring with Miske and others to violate racketeering laws.


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3 thoughts on “Operation EM-EM put Mike Miske’s finances under a microscope

  1. Mike Riley

    The real question now is, why hasn’t Mike Miske taken a plea deal. My guess is no matter what is agreed to he is going to spend a large part of the rest of his life in confinement, some may call it a retirement plan. A well deserved retirement plan.

    Reply

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