He could have just printed the money!
A low-level hospital clerk raked in a stunning $4 million — and spent it all on luxury goods — by selling ink-toner cartridges he stole from his job at Memorial Sloan-Kettering.
Marque Gumbs, 33, yesterday pleaded guilty to the elaborate scheme — which he ran from 2007 to 2010 — in Manhattan Criminal Court.
The receiving clerk legitimately earned $37,800 a year, but his ill-gotten gains included a 2011 BMW sports-utility vehicle, a diamond Rolex, a Louis Vuitton watch, two computers, various pieces of jewelry and two Louis Vuitton bags.
He even entertained a bevy of babes in his Trump Tower pad in New Rochelle and took regular vacations to Las Vegas and the Caribbean, authorities said.
He had to forfeit all his goods when he pleaded guilty to the scam yesterday, agreeing to spend between 2½ and 7½ years behind bars.
Gumbs jumped at the deal offered by prosecutors, rather than going to trial and risking eight to 25 years.
He’ll be formally sentenced on Aug. 8.


