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Lucchese

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Port Richmond Crew

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George (Booty) Van Name was a murder victim, slain by Frank (Skip) DiPietro and Anthony (Tony Bones) Loffredo in November 1990, in retaliation for testifying before a grand jury about a Staten Island-based Lucchese organized crime family crew... Loffredo and DiPietro were among 10 members of the reputed "Port Richmond Crew" who were federally indicted in September 1998 on 48 counts under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). Loffredo said he took Van Name to a secluded area where the assassination took place and his body was later found on Travis Avenue in Bulls Head..

Prince street crew

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https://nypost.com/2013/09/22/secret-mob-history-of-rays-pizza/

27 Prince St., where he’d grown up. He used recipes his mother had brought from Italy. He called the place Ray’s Pizza. (He would later explain that “Ralph’s Pizza” name change....

Clean up

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Christopher Furnari

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Salvatore Santoro

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Peter Chiodo

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Joseph DeFede

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[3]

Joseph "Little Joe" DeFede (1934 – July 15, 2012) was a former New York City mobster and acting boss of the Lucchese crime family who eventually turned informant. Born in 1934, DeFede grew up in the Queens borough of New York City. In his early days, he operated a hot dog vendor truck in Coney Island, Brooklyn, running numbers rackets on the side. A close friend and handball partner of Lucchese leader Vittorio "Vic" Amuso, DeFede was inducted into the family in 1986 after Amuso became boss. DeFede's rise and fall in the New York mob can all be attributed to Amuso. DeFede drove a Cadillac and owned three race horses that he stabled at Aqueduct Racetrack in Queens. DeFede was married twice, and is currently wed to his second wife Nancy who entered the Witness Protection Program with him. The couple receive an annual income of $30,000 a year from Nancy's pension and a modest annuity provided by the U.S. Marshals Service...

During the late '90s, Amuso's relationship with DeFede began to sour. Suspecting that DeFede was hiding money from the family, Amuso replaced him as acting boss with Steven Crea, head of the family's powerful Bronx faction. Once Crea took over, family profits rose enormously. That was enough to convince Amuso that DeFede had been skimming profits; Amuso reportedly decided to have him murdered.

In 1994, Amuso was convicted of federal racketeering and murder charges and sent to prison for life. Amuso then named DeFede his acting boss to replace Alphonse D'Arco with a weaker and more controllable man at the top, after D'Arco turned rat after botching several hits. On April 28, 1998, DeFede was indicted on nine counts of racketeering stemming from his supervision of the family rackets in New York's Garment District from 1991 to 1996. The prosecution reported that the Lucchese family had been grossing $40,000 per month from Garment District businesses since the mid-1980s. In December 1998, DeFede pleaded guilty to the charges and received five years in prison.

On February 5, 2002, DeFede was released from a Lexington, Kentucky prison medical center. Having heard of Amuso's plans to kill him, DeFede immediately became a government informant. DeFede explained the Garment District rackets and the protection rackets in Howard Beach, Queens. He also provided information leading to the convictions of Crea, Louis Daidone, Dominic Truscello, Joseph Tangorra, Anthony Baratta, and a number of family captains, soldiers and associates. While testifying against Gambino crime family boss Peter Gotti, DeFede exclaimed that all he made during his reign as acting boss was $1,014,000, or approximately $250,000 per year. DeFede also estimated that a low ranking family soldier would make on average $50,000 per year.

DeFede entered and left the federal Witness Protection Program, moving to live in Florida under an assumed name. He and his wife reportedly lived on $30,000 a year, their assets having been depleted by legal bills and the cost of creating new identities.[1] On July 15, 2012 DeFede died from a heart attack.[2]

Footnote ex

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samples****

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http://mafiamembershipcharts.blogspot.com/2016/01/bios-of-early-lucchese-members_5.html

Add

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Rich Deluca

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https://nypost.com/2001/12/07/mob-hijack-ring-busted-cops/


https://www.google.com/books/edition/Five_Families/VhRmDQAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=Richard+DeLuca+Lucchese&pg=PA281&printsec=frontcover

five families by Sewlyn pg 281......

Richard DeLuca June 19, 1934 - September 19, 2020

Richard DeLuca on September 19, 2020 of Fort Lee, N.J., age 86...

https://www.akmacagnafuneralhome.com/obituary/richard-deluca

--

In 1999, one of DeLuca's associates John Donnadio unknowingly became involved with an undercover NYPD Jewish-born detective who went by the name Vincent Spinelli.[7] DeLuca collected a portion of illegal earnings from Donnadio's crew of associates who were trafficking firearms, loansharking and other committing other crimes.[8] Over time Donnadio introduced the undercover NYPD agent to Bonanno family capo Patrick DeFilippo who operated his crew and a gun ring from the Aquarius Social Club on Waterbury Ave in the Schuylerville neighborhood of the Bronx.[7] In 2002, the NYPD undercover operation of Vincent Spinelli ended and Donnadio along with Bonanno capo Patrick DeFilippo and others were arrested and indicted.[8]

Joseph Lucchese

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Joseph Lucchese http://www.nytimes.com/1986/11/20/nyregion/verdict-is-termed-a-blow-to-the-mafia.html?pagewanted=all

(In the Lucchese family, the longtime boss, Anthony Corallo, who was also convicted yesterday, has already been replaced by Neil Migliore, 53, a former captain and owner of a Queens marble business, Lieutenant Franceschini said. He said Mr. Migliore also ran a gambling operation with Joe Lucchese, brother of the late family boss, Tommy Lucchese.)......

R Lucchese

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  • Robert Luckese ..

https://books.google.com/books?id=0J4BJHbKRkkC&pg=RA5-PA45&lpg=RA5-PA45&dq=Robert+Luckese&source=bl&ots=lYy3yz6Ta2&sig=ACfU3U1uv2DNkEf1t5eZlthp3uaFhhpE5w&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwif47-ymfLlAhXIuFkKHRh_AXgQ6AEwDHoECAgQAQ#v=onepage&q=Robert%20Luckese&f=false

Laratro

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Books ..

  • NAME: JOSEPH LARATRO DOB:. February 17, 1916 A
  • : Joey Narrow ADDRESS : l2 Bouton Road, Lloyd Harbor, Long Island, New York BUSINESS M. LoBosco Scrap Metals, Inc., l26-17 38th Avenue, INTERESTS: Corona, Queens, New York MARITAL STATUS: Wife - Marion FAMILY: Luchese POSITION: Lieutenant Joseph Laratro is active in policy, shylocking and extortion. Laratro sold his interest in LoBosco Scrap Metals, Inc. in 1967. Laratro controls a gambling operation in ...

Report of the New York State Joint Legislative Committee on Crime, Its Causes, Control & Effect on Society The Committee, 1971 - Crime - 101 pages https://books.google.com/books?id=ys9KAQAAMAAJ&q=Joseph+LaRatro&dq=Joseph+LaRatro&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwi9x5GnpI3ZAhXSmVkKHWcPCnwQ6AEIKTAA

Laratro controls a gambling operation in corona, Queens with soldier Aniello Migliore and was considered to be the overseer gambling opeations for Tommy Lucchese in Queens. bookmaking, policy operations and large telephone setups p196 Joseph Laratro born Feb 17, 1916 "Joey Narrow

claimed that two companies Iws bought in 1978 were aquired from Joseph Laratro who is identified member of Lucchese family, the lucchese family who were involved in operating a property rights cartel in long island pp.136

  • JOSEPH (JOEY NARROW) LARATRO - born 1916 in the Corona section of Queens (108-57 Fiftieth Ave) and raised at (35-20 108th Street). He later moved to Bayside (264-11 60th Ave.) in Queens. By 1965, he had migrated out to Suffolk County on LI, to the exclusive Lloyd Harbor section (12 Bouton Road). NYCPD #E-11494. He was a longtime soldier, who by the late 1950’s was elevated to a position of “Capo di decina” in the Lucchese Family of Harlem. Born and raised in the Corona section, that’s where he based his operations out of for many years. Activities included: policy, bookmaking, shylocking, floating dice games, extortion. He was a partner in LoBosco Scrap Metals, Inc., of Corona, one of whose members was a member of the $1,000. club of the Suffolk Republican Party. He started out (1930’s) as a numbers runner as a kid, and graduated to a policy “controller” for the Corona, Elmhurst and Jackson Heights area. He befriended Joseph (Joe Brown) Lucchese, the brother of the underboss Gaetano Lucchese. Lucchese’s blood family had moved from East Harlem to Corona by the early 1930’s, so they became neighborhood friends. They became partners, and with the blessing of “Tommy Brown”, the “two Joey’s” took over control of the entire area’s gambling rackets (bookmaking, dice and card games, policy). Laratro had a brother named Donato (Danny Narrow), who also became a bookmaker affiliated with his brother and Lucchese. During the 1950’s and 1960’s, Laratro was the head of a $15,000,000. a year gambling operation based in Corona (they were said to have 69 runners). He utilized soldier Aniello (Neil) Migliore as his “right hand” man. He was arrested many times over the years, all gambling related. He had arrests since 1939 for: policy (5 times), bookmaking (3 times), possession of wiretap equipment. Convicted for policy (4 times), bookmaking (twice). But was never jailed. Federal authorities named Laratro as “the overlord of gambling operations under the Lucchese jurisdiction”. He was identified as an attendee at the infamous mob summit at “Apalachin” NY in 1957. During the Valachi hearing, Joe Valachi identified Laratro and Joseph Lucchese as top gambling figures and crime captains. The public exposure from those two events brought tremendous LE scrutiny to them. He numbered among his associates most of the top mobsters in the NYC area if not the country; Thomas Lucchese, Joseph Lucchese, Neil Migliore, Anthony Grio, Anthony Lucchese, Carmine Tramunti, Frank Arra,

Hugh Mulligan, Frank Campanello, Donato Laietta, Joseph Brocchini, Carlo Gambino and many more. In 1967, police raided the homes of Laratro and Migliore, seizing betting slips and records of $70,000. for the prior weeks “play”. They also confiscated illegal “eavesdropping equipment” in Laratro’a home. With the death of Gaetano Lucchese in 1967 of brain cancer, and the heavy policy and grand jury investigations looming over the Lucchese Family operations, “Joey Narrow” decided to sell his Lloyd Harbor mansion, sell his interest in LoBosco Scrap Metals, and relocate down to South Florida. There, he settled into the sunshine state and purchased a garbage carting business and other property holdings. He also purchased a luxurious home in wealthy Hallandale (543 Palm Drive). He kept a very low profile in the following years, never again being charged with any crime. He had several strokes, passed away in 1989..... “Joey Narrow” lived a very charmed life as a top “Capo” in the family, never served any jail time, and earned millions of dollars in his lifetime.... I dare say, a successful Mafioso career by anybody’s measuring stick!

Lagano

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Frank Lagano was a former member of Lucchese family's New Jersey crew.[11] In 2007, former director of Hackensack police Michael Mordaga and others in the Bergen County Prosecutor's Office intentionally revealed that Lagano was a state informant which led to his murder.[11] On April 12, 2007, Lagano was murdered in the parking lot of his East Brunswick diner.[12]

In 2012, Lagano's family filed a lawsuit against Bergen County Prosecutor's Office and Michael Mordaga.[13] The Lagano family claims that Mordaga had personal and business relationship with Frank Lagano and that Mordaga found out in 2007, that Lagano had become a confidential informant in exchange for a light prison sentence when he accepted an offer from James Sweeney, a former organized-crime investigator for the New Jersey state Division of Criminal Justice.[13]

Rosato

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  • Joseph "Joe Palisades" Rosato; - the husband of Lucchese's sister Rose.. [14] Rosato was involved in the Garment District rackets. In 1963, government witness Joseph Valachi identified Rosato as a Lucchese capo in public hearings....

https://thenewyorkmafia.com/joseph-rosato/

Lubrano

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On May 13, 2010, an indictment charging Joseph Lubrano and others with racketeering and racketeering conspiracy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1962(c} and (d), was returned by a grand jury in the Eastern District of New York. In particular, Joseph Lubrano is accused of being a captain of the Luchese organized crime family of La Cosa Nostra and was charged with predicate acts of state and federal robbery conspiracy.

Joseph Lubrano runs a social club located at Cambreleng Avenue and East 1885n Street in the Bronx, New York. CWl and CW2 advised that they had met with Joseph Lubrano at this location on several occasions to conduct criminal business related to the Luchese organized crime family

On July 29, 2010, data from the GPS device installed on WATSON’s car indicated that WATSON’s car had traveled from the Bronx to Staten 1sland, in the vicinity of Charleston Street. An individual living in a residence on that street was interviewed by law enforcement agents and reported that an individual matching Lubrano’s description had stopped by and asked for the Cutaia family. Joseph Cutaia, Salvatore Cutaia, Salvatore Cutaia Jr,, Anthony Cutaia and Domenico Cutaia are Lubrano's co~defendants, and their family members previously lived on Charleston street in Staten Island. Based on this information, it is my belief that WATSON drove Lubrano to Staten ISland on July 29, 2010.

On August 17, 2010, 1 spoke to John WATSON in the hallway of his residence at 2459 Cambreleng Avenue, Bronx, New York. 1 again advised him that Lubrano was a fugitive and asked whether he knew Lubrano’s whereabouts. WATSON advised that he did not.


https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/4320427/111/1/united-states-v-john-doe/

https://www.courtlistener.com/docket/4320427/223/united-states-v-bernardo/

http://www.silive.com/news/2017/10/south_shore_burglary_suspect_h.html Cutia ..

Foceri

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  • Luigi "Louis Beans" Foceri and Frank Bellino who both were former vice-presidents of Local 20 union began they were extorting the concrete industry.,

http://www.laborers.org/complaint.html

Foceri-Louis Louie Beans 1922-89 Vincent[B] 1950-80's Soli

Foceri-Vincent Vinnie Beans 1918-79 Louis[B] 1950-70's Capo http://mafiamembershipcharts.blogspot.com/2017/11/lucchese-family-membership-chart-1960.html

https://books.google.com/books?id=2msVCgAAQBAJ&printsec=frontcover&dq=North+Berry+Concrete+Luigi+Foceri+and+Frank+Bellino&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwjk39SWtfvYAhWM0FMKHWEMD30QuwUIOjAC#v=snippet&q=bellino&f=false

Casso was assigned to Vincent "Vinnie Beans" Foceri's crew that operated from 116th Street in Manhattan and from Fourteenth Avenue in Brooklyn...

Vincent Foceri aka Vinny Beans (1918-) was a captain in the Lucchese crime family. He was a known heroin trafficker and had two convictions involving that drug. His crime sheet also mentions four bookmaking convictions. He was close to Carmine Tramunti, one time acting boss of the family. His crew operated from 116th Street in Manhattan and from Fourteenth Avenue in Brooklyn and once contained future underboss Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso. He served as Lucchese family consigliere from 1973-1981 and then allegedly retired from organized crime. http://mafia.wikia.com/wiki/Vincent_Foceri

In the 1970s, former consigliere Vincent “Vinnie Beans” Foceri (Foceri) controlled Local 20 for the Luchese family.  Mouw Decl. & 27.  Upon Foceri’s death, responsibility for the local fell to Luchese capo Chris “Christy Tick” Furnari Sr. (Furnari Sr.), who later became the Luchese consiglieri.  Mouw Decl. ¶ 27.  Furnari Sr. exercised control over Local 20 through Luchese soldier Frank Bellino and Local 20 official Charles Dolcimascolo.  Tr. 32.   11.     In the mid-1980s, Furnari Sr. was incarcerated as a result of the prosecution of numerous Commission members.  Id.  Control of the local went to his son, Chris Furnari Jr. (Furnari Jr.), who ultimately became Local 20’s Business Manager.  Tr. 32, 33; Mouw Decl. & 27.  After a falling out with the new Luchese family boss, Furnari Jr. was dismissed from the family and sent to Florida.  Tr. 33. Control then passed to Pete Chiodo and George Zappola.  Id.   12.     For the past ten years, Dom Truscello has been the capo in charge of Local 20.  Id.  He exercises control over the local through union member Joe Datello.  Id.

http://archive.li/8khhk#selection-1573.587-1568.3

  • LOUIS (LOUIE BEANS) FOCERI - born 1922 in East Harlem. FBI #2614144, NYPD #B-189802. Born and raised in Harlem, relocated in the early 1950’s to Queens, living in the Jackson Heights-Corona section of the boro (23-70 93rd St.), before moving to the Whitestone section by the early 1960’s. By the mid-1960’s Foceri had moved out to LI (11 Hurtin Blvd., Smithtown). Frequented the area around 117th and Pleasant Ave, and the “Royalites” Social Club (314 E. 119th St.). Also known as Anthony Falco. Arrested 17 times since 1940 for; rape, grand larceny, burglary, felonious assault, policy (5 times), robbery, possession of guns, dice games (4 times), forgery, heroin conspiracy. Convicted of policy (3 times), dice (3 times), robbery (2.5-5 years). Had a brother Vincent (Vinny Beans) of Levittown, who rose to become a capo, then served as consigliere for a short time during the early 1970’s. Along with his brother Vinny served in the regime of Samuel (Big Sam) Cavalieri. Also had served under Paul Correale before his death in Florida in 1962. Considered a aide to Cavalieri in the Harlem policy rackets (numbers). By the 1970’s, he became active in a Laborers union local, holding a job to show legitimate income. Foceri was never known to hold legitimate employment. Close associates included Nathan Behrman, Vincent (Jimmy East) Ciraulo, Correale, Cavalieri, Sam Monastersky, Daniel and Nicholas Lessa and Joseph (Joey Narrows) Laratro. “Louie Beans” was considered a respected member of the Mafia engaged in the numbers racket and narcotics (heroin) trade. In the early 1980’s he was one of many indicted in a major heroin import and distribution ring. He was convicted and sentenced to a long federal prison term, dying behind bars in 1989.


Louis and his brother Vincent Foceri are aides to Carmine Traumunti crime family captain Sam ( Black Sam ) Cavalieri in Harlem policy rackets . Louis has a record of 15 arrests, none of which involved narcotics, but is now considered active in the upper. [15]


  • Samples

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  • Samples

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Michael Spinelli

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Michael Avellino

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son of Salvatore Avellino Michael Avellino Released from prison July 7, 2005

Michael Capra

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Brother Mike and Daniel in associates in Avellino crew ....

https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/aging-mobster-house-arrest-ordering-loan-shakedown-article-1.3189341

https://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/mob-wife-face-time-husband-lied-fbi-article-1.1466607

https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/member-and-associates-lucchese-crime-family-plead-guilty-extortion-conspiracy

https://www.silive.com/news/2015/08/reputed_mobster_accused_of_sha.html

  • Joseph Capra

https://www.nytimes.com/1981/12/21/nyregion/charges-against-donovan-arose-from-routine-audit-5-years-ago.html

  • Michael "Mikey Cap" Capra

https://law.justia.com/cases/federal/district-courts/FSupp/904/235/1762924/


Daniel Capra

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Daniel "Danny Hogan" Capra

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Joseph Capra

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Joseph "Joey Cap" Capra (September 18, 1916 – ) was capo operating in the Bronx.[18] Capra resided in a home in Pelham Parkway, Bronx.[19] In 1980, Capra charged with perjury.[20] On April 20, 1983, Carpa was identified as Carmine Avellino's capo during an FBI recorded conversation between Salvatore Avellino Jr. and his brother Carmine Avellino.[21]


On April 20, 1983, the FBI recorded conversation between Salvatore Avellino Jr. and his brother Carmine Avellino about a craps game that Carmine opened up, it caused Aniello Migliore to complain to Underboss Salvatore Santoro about the game cutting into his profits, Salvatore Avellino Jr. told his brother Carmine, that he should have spoken to Joseph Capra before opening the game.[21]

Anthony Ciccone

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Anthony "Tony Moon" Ciccone (July 18, 1918 – August 16, 1987) was a former capo of a Bronx crew.[18] Ciccone married Anthony Castaldi's sister.[22] He associated with Anthony Castaldi, John Ormento, Salvatore Santoro, Rocco Mazzie, Salvatore LoProto, Patsy Moccio, Vincent Mauro.[22] His brother Salvatore "Sal the Sailor" Ciccone became a made member in the Lucchese family.[19]

Ciccone resided in a home in Melba, Queens with his family.[23] In October 1961, the FBI reported that Ciccone operated a numbers game and floating dice game in East Harlem and worked with Anthony Salerno.[23] In 1962, Ciccone was convicted of narcotic charges and became a fugitive.[24] Ciccone died on August 16, 1987, of natural causes.[18][25]

More notes: Ciccone was associated with major narcotics suppliers dealing kilograms in New York City.[26]

Anthony Castaldi

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Anthony Vincent "Tony Bones" Castaldi (January 27, 1913 – 1981), also known as "Tony Higgins", was a former capo of a Bronx crew.[22] He was married to Jean Penosi, the sister of Guido Penosi.[22] His brother Samuel Castaldi joined him becoming a member of the Lucchese family.[22] Castaldi's sister Rose married Anthony Ciccone a mobster in the Lucchese family. He worked with Anthony "Tea Bags" LoPinto in controlling a large heroin wholesaling distribution network.[22] Castaldi also held interests in Jennie's Restaurant on second Ave and real estate in the East Harlem area.[22] Castaldi was known to associate with Anthony Strollo, John Ormento, Salvatore Santoro, Carmine Locascio, Peter Locascio, Anthony Ciccone, Vincent Mauro, Guido Penosi, Vincent Squillante, John Stoppelli and Sam Kass.[22] In 1964, Castaldi served 3 months in jail for contempt.[24] Castaldi died in 1981.[25]

Nicknamed Tony Bones for gambling and favoring rolling dice or bones.[27]

Involved in local 239 with Corallo https://books.google.com/books?id=FpUvAAAAMAAJ&pg=PA89&dq=Anthony+%E2%80%9CTony+Bones%E2%80%9D+Castaldi&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjrt-W08vD_AhWBMlkFHQGGA9kQ6AF6BAgEEAI#v=snippet&q=Castaldi&f=false

Samuel Castaldi

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Samuel "Sammy Bones" Castaldi (February 26, 1909 – August 8, 1998) was a former capo of a Bronx crew.[18] His brother Anthony "Tony Bones" Castaldi was also a member of the Lucchese family.[22] Castaldi resided in a home in Middle Village, Queens.[19] In the early 1990s, Castaldi's health deteriorated and his Bronx crew was taken over by Steven Crea.[28][29] Castaldi died on August 8, 1999.[25]

John Ormento

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John "Big John" Ormento (August 1, 1912) in 1962 he received a 40 year prison sentenced on narcotics charges.[24]


https://www.google.com/books/edition/Report_of_the_New_York_State_Joint_Legis/ys9KAQAAMAAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=John+Big+John+Ormento&pg=PA227&printsec=frontcover

Nicknamed Governor of Harlem and leader of 107th Street Mob.[27]

Vincent Zappola

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-- Bensonhurst ----

https://www.nytimes.com/1990/11/15/nyregion/14-are-charged-in-7-burglaries-by-skilled-ring.html

14 Are Charged In 7 Burglaries By Skilled Ring By Arnold H. Lubasch Nov. 15, 1990

Fourteen men were charged yesterday with operating a burglary ring that used skilled specialists to steal cash and jewelry from banks and stores in New York and New Jersey. The authorities believe that the ring also carried out hundreds of other burglaries totaling as much as $100 million since 1985, said James M. Fox, head of the New York office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The ring was called the Bypass Gang, he added, because its members were "very adept at bypassing alarm systems."

"This was a very sophisticated operation," said Andrew J. Maloney, the United States Attorney in Brooklyn. He noted that a member who became an informer had "worked for a safe company and had access to all of the safe manufacturers in this country." A Federal prosecutor handling the case, Jack Wenik, said the indictment focused on seven burglaries amounting to $1.8 million in cash and property. Knowledge of Locksmithing According to the indictment, ring members opened safes by using a drilling technique that "required extensive skill and knowledge of locksmithing."

The defendants were charged in a Federal racketeering indictment. Investigators added that the ring had ties to the Lucchese and Colombo crime families. Two defendants, Salvatore Fusco of Brooklyn, and Vincent Zappola of Staten Island, were identified by prosecutors as the organizers of the ring. Also indicted were Mr. Zappola's brothers, Anthony Zappola of Staten Island, who is a former New York City police officer, and George Zappola of Atlantic Highlands, N.J.

Mr. Fusco and another defendant, Michael Bloome of Staten Island, were charged with trying to murder the informer in the case, Dominick Costa, who was seriously wounded in a shooting two years ago and went into the Witness Protection Program. Other defendants are John DeVillio, Thomas Roberto, Frank Smith, Angelo Soto and Anthony Vega, all of Brooklyn; Joseph DeFigueroa, Philip DeAngelo and Peter Spoto, all of Queens, and Richard Santiago of York, Pa.


https://www.nytimes.com/1991/10/29/nyregion/5-convicted-in-high-tech-burglaries.html

Anthony Guzzo

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-- Bensonhurst ---

Anthony Guzzo is Made member along with John Pennisi.

https://sitdownnews.com/colombo-crime-family-treachery/

Pennisi and Guzzo were inducted on 02 April 2013

Anthony Castelle

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-- Bensonhurst --

Scotty Gervasi

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-- Bensonhurst ---

New members

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Brooklyn crew (vario crew) valley stream now..

Danny "Pilot" Campo - new member of Vario crew..

John (Butch) Arpino new member of Vario crew

Louis “Louie Jet” Gampero associate of Ray Argentina

Gary P. Medure

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Gary P. Medure (born December 27, 1953) [30] is a soldier in the Bronx faction. Medure is a close associate to Joseph DiNapoli.


- Gary P. Medure, 56, of New York, N.Y., who also has an address listing at 1075 Central Park Ave. in Scarsdale, a close associate of DiNapoli who allegedly managed gambling "packages," groups of bettors who regularly gambled through the operation.

https://patch.com/new-york/scarsdale/indictment-names-scarsdale-man-at-head-of-lucchese-cr2a3836528a

On May 14, 2010, thirty four members and associates of the Lucchese crime family's New Jersey faction were indicted on gambling, money laundering and racketeering charges.[31] From the original thirty two arrested in 2007, Wayne Cross Jr., David Ocejo and Astrit Hani were excluded from the indictment. The indictment did name Nicodemo Scarfo, Jr., Frank Cetta, Gary P. Medure, Michael A. Maffucci, Robert V. DeCrescenzo and Charles J. Bologna as new defendants in the case.[31]

Michael Guerriero

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Michael Guerriero - (born July 24, 1954) is a [30]

Thomas “Fat Thomas” D’Ambrosio

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Anthony “Bowat” serve as his caporegime, Bowat would become [shelved] inactive and Paolo “Paul” Lo Duca became Thomas’s new Captain.

https://sitdownnews.com/harlem-heroin-the-lucchese-family/


Paolo Lo Duca

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Anthony Accetturo, Jr.

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Lived in Florida working for lucchese

Baratta crew

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Johnny Capra member of the Baratta crew

Anthony Russo member of Baratta crew for some time

Baratta, Anthony DiMeglio, 60, also admitted to participating in the 1983 murder of Victor Malinsky and the arson of a Maryland bingo hall in 1989. Anthony 'Curly' Russo, and 42-year- old Pietro 'Petey Pizza' Misuraca each face up to 20 years in prison, $250,000 fines and five years probation when they are sentenced. Joseph 'Joey Bang Bang' Massaro, 49, an alleged Luchese organization soldier, and Joseph Kern, 47, an allged associate of the crime family, are charged with murder and murder conspiracies and will go on trial before Cedarbaum Aug. 23. https://www.upi.com/Archives/1993/08/07/Alleged-Luchese-mobster-pleads-guilty-to-racketeering-charges/8797744696000/



Drive on Mob Sabotaged In New Jersey https://www.nytimes.com/1994/08/12/nyregion/drive-on-mob-sabotaged-in-new-jersey.html New York Times By Clifford J. Levy Aug. 12, 1994

An extensive Federal undercover operation that was intended to block the Lucchese crime family from gaining a new foothold in New Jersey was blown apart when a New York City transit police officer apparently tipped off a ringleader of the conspiracy, the authorities said today.

The collapse of the investigation was revealed in a Federal indictment that chronicled how an array of law-enforcement agencies had massed last year to push back the incursion by the Luccheses, who are based in New York, only to have the Government's efforts sabotaged when an informer's identity was revealed.

"In terms of organized crime, this was one of our most important cases in years," said a senior law-enforcement official in New Jersey, who, like others interviewed, spoke only on the condition of anonymity. "We were very upset about it."

Though the informer's identity was compromised, the investigation still bore some fruit. In the 51-count indictment announced today, the United States Attorney here, Faith S. Hochberg, charged nine men reputed to be members of the Lucchese family with conspiring to import drugs and other crimes. Five Men Being Sought

But senior law-enforcement officials said that if the investigation had continued, they would have been able to arrest many more people.

Four of those indicted were arrested this morning, including Joseph Giampa, 53, of Mount Vernon, suspected of being a capo, or captain, in the Lucchese family. The Federal authorities, including the F.B.I., said they were seeking the five other men, two of whom are considered fugitives.

The transit police officer, who was not identified in the indictment, may not know he is suspected of sabotaging the operation, officials said. A spokesman for the transit police, Sgt. Luis Medina, said he was not aware of any such investigation.

The indictment says that Gennaro Vittorio, 26, Mr. Giampa's stepson, who was also indicted, told the informant, Richard Sabol, in February that Mr. Vittorio had learned about the undercover operation from a police officer.

A senior law-enforcement official said that the transit police officer may have known Mr. Vittorio because the two live in Westchester County. But the official refused to say more, including why a New York City transit police officer would know about an organized crime investigation in New Jersey.

Mr. Sabol was apparently in prison when the United States Customs Service received information that the Lucchese family wanted to revitalize its New Jersey operations by establishing an import-export company to smuggle and sell large amounts of heroin and cocaine, officials said.

Like many organized-crime families in the region, the Luccheses have in recent years been weakened by prosecutions, defections and murder.

Customs officials got a furlough for Mr. Sabol in return for his agreeing to infiltrate the Lucchese plot, a senior official said. In December 1993, Mr. Giampa and Mr. Vittorio, the two leaders, decided to trust Mr. Sabol. Exporting Stolen Cars

The group, which included members of the Giampa faction and another Lucchese faction led by Anthony Baratta, began planning a variety of crimes in addition to drug smuggling, including firearms and counterfeit-money trafficking, loan-sharking, hijacking, selling stolen property and gambling, Ms. Hochberg said.

The plotters, she said, were particularly interested in exporting stolen cars from Newark, a problem that has long plagued the port there.

The arrests today came a day after two other high-ranking members of the Lucchese family in New Jersey were sentenced to long prison terms. Michael Taccetta, 46, of Florham Park, received 40 years from a state judge, while Michael Perna, 52, of Belleville, received 25 years.

Andrew Weinstein, one of Mr. Giampa's lawyers, said he had not yet seen the indictment. But he said that when Mr. Giampa was charged in 1992 with murder in aid of racketeering, he was acquitted.

Vario

[edit]

Peter "Rugsy" Vario (Soldier)... Peter "Jocko" Vario (Soldier)... Peter A. Vario..

John Sorrentino

[edit]

member of prince street.

his son James C. Sorrentino.

Brooklyn

[edit]

Jody Calabrese: One of four mobsters inducted into the Mafia at the same ceremony as Gioia. He was convicted for his involvement in the attempted murder of the sister of a Lucchese soldier and the attempted murder of a garbage hauler who worked for a rival. He was sentenced to 10 years in prison and released in 2006


Gregory “Whitey” Cappello: Another of the four associates inducted into the Lucchese crime family with Gioia in 1991, he was part of a crew who attempted to murder the sister of a Lucchese soldier in an effort to prevent her brother from testifying. He was arrested on extortion charges and died in prison in 1997.


Nicholas “Fat Nicky” DiCostanza: A member of the Lucchese family. He pleaded guilty to extortion and was sentenced to 27 months in prison in 1995. Three years later, he was indicted on federal drug charges. Prosecutors alleged DiCostanza used his business to launder drug money and extorted payments from Staten Island businesses. He suffered a stroke. The outcome of the case is unclear.

Frank “Skip” DiPietro: A Lucchese crime-family associate and member of the Staten Island crew. He pleaded guilty in 2000 to killing a fellow gang member who testified about the crew's narcotics activity. He was released from prison in August 2016.

Frank “Frankie Pearl” Federico: A member of the Lucchese family, he was believed to be involved in the murder of Kubecka and Barstow, the two New York City garbage men. Warrants were issued for his arrest in 1993 and 1994. Federico went into hiding for the next nine years. In 2003, he was spotted at a doughnut shop with a former associate and taken into custody. In 2004, he was sentenced to 15 years in prison. Federico was released from federal prison in early 2016.

Mario Gallo: He was involved in the execution of Farace (See James Galione, above). Gallo pleaded guilty to murder, among other charges. He was sentenced to 15 years in prison. Gallo was released in November 2009.

Frank “Fat Frankie” Giacobbe: A Lucchese soldier, he was indicted with Frank Papagni, George Conte and George Zappola for the 1992 murder of a Staten Island man. Giacobbe was convicted and released from prison in December 2008.

John “Fat Face” Petrucelli: The son of a mobster, he was a member of the Tanglewood Boys gang in Yonkers and a Lucchese family associate. Petrucelli was convicted in 2002 for the revenge killing of a 17-year-old boy outside a public school. Petrucelli stabbed Paul Cicero. The murder was a warning to Cicero’s cousin, a Genovese family associate who had shot a member of the gang.

Michael “Baldy” Spinelli: A Lucchese family associate who became a “made man” while in prison. He pleaded guilty in 1993 to racketeering and murder charges and received a 22-year prison sentence. In 1998, he and his brother, Robert Spinelli, and Dino Basciano were convicted of shooting the sister of a former Lucchese captain to prevent him from testifying against the family. Despite being shot twice, the victim survived. Gioia testified that Spinelli told him details about the attempted murder when they were incarcerated together in 1994. Spinelli’s lawyers have repeatedly appealed the conviction, claiming Gioia’s testimony was tainted and that he lied to the jury about his knowledge of other crimes when he testified.

[32]

Pennisi notes

[edit]

Q/a

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Feuer, Alan (2010-04-30). "After the Mob, He's Just Scraping By". The New York Times. Retrieved 2011-08-21.
  2. ^ Capeci, Jerry (2012-11-29). "Heart Attack Fells Joe Defede; Turncoat Luchese Acting Boss". Gang Land News. Retrieved 2012-11-29.
  3. ^ Cite error: The named reference Newton pp.92 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ Cite error: The named reference The Committee, 1971 pp.196 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ Capeci, Robbins p.290-291
  6. ^ Smith, Greg (September 24, 1997). "Feds Nab 14 on Drug Rap". New York Daily News. Retrieved May 20, 2018.
  7. ^ a b "How a Jewish-born NYPD detective went undercover as a mobster to help take down Bonanno, Luchese gun ring". NEW YORK DAILY NEWS. 16 September 2017. Retrieved 27 April 2024.
  8. ^ a b "DECISION OF THE BUSINESS INTEGRITY COMMISSION DENYING THE APPLICATION OF RIVER PRODUCE CORP. FOR REGISTRATION AS A WHOLESALEBUSINESS INA PUBLIC WHOLESALE MARKE" (PDF). THE CITY OF NEW YORK BUSINESS INTEGRITY COMMISSION. 2 August 2011. Retrieved 27 April 2024.
  9. ^ Cite error: The named reference deport Lucchese NY Times 1952 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  10. ^ State of New Jersey Commission of Investigation. "The New Jersey Garment Industry". April 1991. (p. 27) [1]
  11. ^ a b Vincent, Isabel (6 October 2023). "Ex-top cop helped Bob Menendez's wife leave deadly car crash without sobriety test or handing over phone". New York Post. News. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  12. ^ Rimbach, Jean (28 December 2017). "A bizarre mob tale continues, with no end in sight". North Jersey. News. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  13. ^ a b Ivers, Dan (6 September 2012). "Family of murdered Lucchese mobster claims Bergen detective outed him as informant". NJ Advance Media for NJ.com. News. Retrieved 8 October 2023.
  14. ^ McClellan Chart (1963) "Racketeering Relatives" Gangrule.com
  15. ^ The Heroin Trail The First Journalistic Investigation to Trace Heroin Traffic from Turkey to France to Its Ultimate Customer, the Young American Addict. Souvenir Press. 1975. p. 274. ISBN 9780285621718. Retrieved 15 September 2024.
  16. ^ Guart, Al (November 20, 2000). "Con Artist & The Sopranos Star Did Actor Help Hamptons Grifter Flee?". New York Post. Retrieved April 12, 2020.
  17. ^ Cedilot, Andre; Andre Noel (2012). Mafia Inc: The Long, Bloody Reign of Canada's Sicilian Clan. Vintage Canada. pp. 278–284. ISBN 0307360415.
  18. ^ a b c d Cite error: The named reference Lucchese family April 1988 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  19. ^ a b c United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on the Judiciary (1984). Organized Crime in America Hearings Before the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Ninety-eighth Congress, First Session, on Organized Crime in America. Purdue University. p. 241-250. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  20. ^ United States. Department of Labor. Office of the Inspector General (1980). Semiannual Report to the Congress. Semiannual Report April 1, 1980 - September 30, 1980: U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General. p. 119. Retrieved 17 April 2022.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location (link)
  21. ^ a b New York Court. New York Court of Appeals. Records and Briefs. 75 NY2D 434, APPENDIX Part 2, PEOPLE V VESPUCCI. p. A575. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  22. ^ a b c d e f g h i United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Government Operations. Permament Subcommittee on Investigations (10 June 2011). Organized Crime and Illicit Traffic in Narcotics Hearings ... Eighty-eighth Congress, First Session Pursuant to Senate Resolution 17, 88th Congress · Volume 5, Parts 4-6. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 977, 1018. Retrieved 10 April 2022.
  23. ^ a b FBI (31 August 1961). "FBI Communications Section Oct 30 1961 Teletype". FBI. FBI report. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  24. ^ a b c Maas, Peter (30 June 1969). "Nixon vs. the City's Top Crimefighter". pp.24-27. New York Magazine. News Paper. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  25. ^ a b c Federal Bureau of Investigation: Record/Information Dissemination Section (21 November 2011). "Updated Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) Record Information / Dissemination Section (RIDS) Dead List, (complete), 2011" (PDF). Federal Bureau of Investigation. Government. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  26. ^ United States Congress (1967). Congressional Record Proceedings and Debates of the ... Congress · Volume 113. U.S. Government Printing Office. p. 12842. Retrieved 22 January 2023.
  27. ^ a b "Nickname? Imaginative, colorful and useful too". Scrantonian Tribune. New Paper. 3 June 1962. Retrieved 9 July 2023.
  28. ^ Guy Lawson, William Oldham (28 August 2007). The Brotherhoods The True Story of Two Cops Who Murdered for the Mafia. Pocket Books. p. 244. Retrieved 17 April 2022.
  29. ^ HARROD, BRIAN (28 AUGUST 2020). "Yonkers Mafia Boss Steven Crea Sentenced To Life In The Slammer". Yonkers Tribune. News Paper. Retrieved 17 April 2022. {{cite news}}: Check date values in: |date= (help)
  30. ^ a b abc7NY (13 January 2012). "29 charged in DOB-mob corruption sting". ABC7NY. News. Retrieved 19 June 2021.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  31. ^ a b "Attorney General Dow Announces Indictment of Lucchese Crime Family Hierarchy, Including Two New York Bosses, New Jersey Leaders and 30 Other Members & Associates". New Jersey Office of the Attorney General. May 14, 2010. Retrieved April 7, 2013.
  32. ^ Cite error: The named reference Gioia Jr. testimony was invoked but never defined (see the help page).

Photos

[edit]
  • Joseph Massino

https://www.nj.gov/oag/ge/exclusion/massino_joseph.htm

  • Vito Orena

https://www.nj.gov/oag/ge/exclusion/orena_vito.htm

  • Angelo Prisco

https://www.nj.gov/oag/ge/exclusion/prisco_angelo.htm

Genovese Past members

[edit]

Depiro

[edit]

NJ docks Stephen Depiro

Jersey

[edit]

[1]

TRENTON, Aug. 20—Gerardo Catena, the reputed Mafia bos who was released from a stat reformatory after five year yesterday, will have to meet soon with Carlo Gambino, th New York crime family boss and the dominant underworlc figure in the Metropolitan area, according to state and county, law enforcement officials.

One state police expert or organized crime said such a meeting was “inevitable” if only to establish guidelines to straighten out the muddled un derworld picture that followed Mr. Catena's jailing on March 4, 1970, for his refusal to talk to the State Commission of Investigation.

In the absence of Mr. Catena who law enforcement sources say became the boss of the New Jersey portion of the Vit Genovese family following th death of the former “boss o bosses” in 1969, some of Mr Gambino's lieutenants begat moving into northern New Jer sey rackets.

Interviews with officials of the State Attorney General's office, the State Police, the State Commission of Investigation and county police officials familiar with the operation of organized crime produced a consensus that a meeting between the two bosses would soon take place, but speculation differed on what Mr. Catena']s stance might •be at the meeting. 100 Days of Leave

John Matthews, ‘project director of the Newark‐Essex County organized crime strike force, has said Mr. Catena was still. consulted on crime family business while at the Yardville correction center and Clinton Reformatory and during the more than 100 days of leaves he’ was granted for holidays and medical checkups, but did not oversee the day‐to‐day operations of his organization. A state police source said he wouldn't be surprised if Mr. Catena, who is 73 and described as being in failing health, would retire and move to Florida.

“Our information was he really didn't want it anyway,” he said, referring to Mr. Catena's ascendancy from his role of one of two underbosses to Mr. Genovese.

The other underboss. Thomas Eboli, alias Tommy Ryan, of Fort Lee was gunned’ down on a Brooklyn street in July, 1972 while Mr. Catena was behind bars and some New York law enforcement officials believe the killing could be traced to the Gambino family.

Qther officials interviewed today said they didn't believe Mr. Catena was ready to step down and looked for him to again exert his influence in north Jersey construction and trucking industries and in blink, and loan‐sharking rackets in Newark, Bergen County and the northern shore resort counties of Monmouth and Ocean.

While Mr. Catena was in prison Rugg.ero Boiardo of Livingston, who is in his 80's and semi‐retired after a brief prison stay, reportedly tried to become more active to “keep the cap on” for Mr. Catena in the face of the intrusion by Gambino forces.

His son, Anthony Boiardo, was expected by some law enorcement officials to also become more active in Mr. Catela's absence. But the younger Boiardo had his case severed from a Federal extortion conspiracy trial in 1970 for health reasons and the United States. Attorney's office stands ready to bring him to trial if he shows signs of improved health or increased activity.

The most visible sign of Mr. Gambino's attempt to pull together elements of the Genovese family under his own influence was the emergence of oseph Paterno of Newark as the man whom many of the 3enovese family members turned to after Mr. Catena was ailed.

Mr. Paterno, who is listed by the United States Justice Department as a lieutenant in the Gambino family, moved to Florida two years ago apphrently to avoid an investigation commission's subpoena and soon the visits by New Jersey underworld figures to Florida reportedly became more frequent.

“We know there was one meeting called in Florida to discuss how to respond to our subpoenas,” an investigation commission official said.

Surveillance of the Florida trips also helped the Bergen County prosecutor's office and the state police to establish the importance of Anthony Carminati, a relatively unknown figure until his arrest in May, along with several associates, on gambling conspiracy charges.

Joseph C. Woodcock, the Bergen County Prosecutor, said the meetings between Mr. Carminati and Mr. Paterno enabled law enforcement officials to identify Mr. Carminati as a, Gambino lieutenant.

Mr. Catena was freed by the State Supreme Court, saying, in a 5 to 2 decision, that the indefinite incarceration had lost its “corrosive power” in Mr. Catena's case and there was no “substantial likelihood” that he would change his mind and talk to the commission. In a dissenting opinion, Justice Sidney Schreiber said Mr. Catena should be kept in jail and not allowed to substitute the underworld code of silence for a legislative mandate to the commission to find out all it. could about organized crime.

Mr. Woodcock said Mr. Catena's release with his oath of silence intact “give for members of the underworld what they couldn't do themselves; they admire that kind of performance.”

But if Mr. Catena stands to be lionized by his associates, other bosses of crime families operating in New Jersey aren't faring as well.

In addition to the Gambino and Genovese families the only Mafia families known to be active in New Jersey are those headed by Simone DeCavalcante of Princeton Township and Angelo Bruno of Philadelphia.

Mr. Bruno was jailed for three years along with Mr. Catena but was released for medical reasons in 1973 and reportedly is scheduled to undergo surgery. Mr. DeCavalcante is under subpoena to appear befori’ the commission, probably in the fall, and is reportedly keeping out of public view. One law enforcement official said there were some indications Mr. DeCavalcante might be considering retiring, but another said he is just being more careful since a series of. police wiretaps on one of his business offices became part of a public court record and brought him unwelcomed notoriety in the late nineteen‐sixties.

Law enforcement officials said one problem that stems) from the successful jailing of the top organized crime figures is the uncertainty abbut who is taking over. “You don't know who the Young Turks are and that's always a problem,” one official said.

Arthur Ave

[edit]

[2]

An undercover NYPD detective posing as a trucker infiltrated a powerful Mafia crew that invited him to their weddings, birthday parties and homes – and was prepared to make him a made member of their family, sources told The Post. The 21/2-year wiseguy role for the 32-year-old detective ended yesterday with the federal indictments of 73 capos, soldiers and associates of the Genovese crime family, including Pasquale “Patsy” Parrello, who conducted his Bronx rackets out of his restaurant, Patsy’s Rigoletto, on Arthur Avenue.

In addition to Savarese and the Parrello brothers, Genovese capos Joseph Dente Jr. and Rosario “Ross” Gangi were indicted in the sweeping extortion, bank fraud and embezzlement case conducted jointly by the NYPD, FBI, the office of Manhattan U.S. Attorney Mary Jo White, and the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms.

[3]

Parrello is accused of embezzling more than $1 million from the benefit funds of Local 11 and Local 964 of the United Bhd. of Carpenters. Allegedly, Parrello and others stole the funds through S&F Carpentry, a unionized company based in Tuckahoe, N.Y., by reporting a fraction of the union carpenters they employed, using non-union labor and destroying payroll records. UBC members allegedly were threatened if they complained about the use of non-union workers

[4]

Leo

[edit]

Leo possible took over John Buster Ardito crew in bronx

Luciano

[edit]

The Silent Gangster: Chapter Five

Lucian pic...

Renaldi Ruggiero

[edit]

Renaldi "Ray" Ruggiero – former capo of in South Florida. Ruggiero was promoted to capo in 2003 controlling rackets in South Florida couties of Broward and Palm Beach.[5] In 2006, Ruggiero, Albert Facchiano and other members of his crew were arrested and charged with extortion, robbery and money laundering.[6] He pleaded guilty to racketeering in 2007.[5] In February 2012, Ruggiero's sentence was cut in half because of his cooperation with the government.[5]

Steven Franse

[edit]

Steven Franse (1895–1953), was a former soldier who was a close associate to Vito Genovese.[7] In 1937, Genovese fled to Italy leaving Franse in charge of his business interests and looking after his wife Anna.[7] When Genovese returned to New York his wife Anna sued for divorce and revealed information about his legal and illegal business interests.[7] Genovese blamed Franse for his wife's defection and ordered capo Anthony Strollo, to set up Franse's murder.[8] On June 18, 1953, Joseph Valachi lured Franse to his restaurant in the Bronx, there Franse was strangled to death by Pasquale Pagano and Fiore Siano (Valachi's nephew).[8]

Sources

  • Sifakis, Carl The Mafia Encyclopedia

Angelo Ponte (needs work)

[edit]

Angelo Ponte was an assoicate in the Genovese crime family active in carting rackets. ..

He was careful to cultivate political connections, and managed to have himself named a Knight of Malta by the Roman Catholic Church. Ponte was a target of the operation wasteland investigation. On January 28, 1997 he pled guilty to participating in a Mafia run operation to control and manipulate the cartage business in New York City.[9] He is the founder of F. Illi Ponte Ristorante on the West Side highway and has extensive real estate holdings throughout the lower west side of Manhattan..

BY Tom Robbins (December 17, 1995) New York Daily News.

Arthur Nigro

[edit]

[5]

[6]

- [7]

More

[edit]
  • Morello & Lupo:
  1. The World's work, Volume 26 "The New Chief of Secret Service" by Frank Marshall White p.33-39
  2. The First Family: Terror, Extortion, Revenge, Murder, and The Birth of the American Mafia by Mike Dash View "Morello family tree"
  • Fortunato Lomonte.
  1. Gangrule: Fortunato Lomonte (Morello cousin)


  • [8] The Genovese crime family often referred to as the Ivy League of organized crime has been one of the more low key New York mafia families for decades. Who exactly has been in control of the Cosa Nostra powerhouse has been a topic of debate for some time. According to multiple sources quoted by Jerry Capeci and ganglandnews, including those in law enforcement circles Liborio “Barney” Bellomo is allegedly the current Genovese family boss. The 59 year old mobster has been calling the shots and sitting atop the ranks of the family very quietly for the last few years according to reports. Bellomo has been a powerful member of he family for years and was appointed as acting boss in the late 1980’s by then boss Vincent Gigante.

According to the report Bellomo learned a lot from former boss Gigante and is using a street boss to relay orders to the family’s capos and soldiers. Long time capo Peter “Petey Red” DiChiara now allegedly serves as the families “street boss” or in somewhat of an acting boss capacity for Bellomo. The infamous Gigante used a similar arrangement years ago in his heyday electing Fat Tony Salerno to serve as an upfront boss helping to keep him under law enforcement’s radar. But one source claimed it was clear Bellomo was the boss and it was one reason why mobsters from both the Bronx and Brooklyn have been making their way to a social club owned by Petey Red in lower Manhattan.

Bellomo has been on the feds radar for years and his seven year reign as acting boss for Gigante from 1989-96 ended in an indictment. He was sent to prison for 12 years after copping a plea on two racketeering indictments in which he was accused or ordering multiple mob hits. He was able to skate around the murder charges by pleading guilty to extortion and served his time from 1996 to 2008. He has been extremely low key and squeaky clean since his 2008 release, which included three years of supervised release. But law enforcement sources claim even though it hasn’t been proven that he has committed a crime since then there is no doubt he is the Genovese family boss.

Mafia control of the New York newspaper rackets shifts families

New York mafia has long maintained a very profitable racket by keeping its hooks in the distribution of New York newspapers in both NY and New Jersey. The mafia newspaper racket has been controlled for the last several years by the Bonanno crime family but times are changing as the beleaguered family losses its grip. Mob sources confirm that powerful Genovese crime family captain Peter “Petey Red” DiChiara has taken control of the mob local newspaper rackets. The Bonanno family continues to lose ground as other families including the Genovese family have once again began to re-establish themselves to an extent as law enforcement focuses more efforts on anti-terrorism. The 72 year old DiChiara although not all that well known is said to be a powerful member of the Genovese family operating out of his social club in Knickerbocker Village. According to sources he used his connections with members and high ranking officials inside two newspapers worker unions to grab control. Payoffs from the racket come from kickbacks and payoffs from the a bootlegging scheme which has stolen magazines and newspapers delivered by non union workers. The elder mobster was busted back in 2001 on gambling, extortion, and money laundering charges after mob associate Michael “Cookie” D’Urso turned rat and wore a wire for feds for three years. He and several members of his crew were taken down and Peter Red ended up doing 63 months. When he returned to the streets along with members of his crew his Market Street social club once again became a hotbed of NY mafia activity according to the feds. It was clear the elder wiseguy was back in action on behalf of the Genovese family. In 2008 Peter Red was being investigated by organized crime detectives along with members of the Newspaper and Mail Deliveries and Mailer Unions for involvement in a check cashing and tax evasion scheme. According to the investigation it involved the use of a shell company to hide illegal payoffs and kickbacks received by the men from the non union drivers bootlegging scheme. To date prosecutors have yet to be able to make a case against DiChiara or any of the Union members for the alleged money laundering and check cashing scams or any form of labor racketeering they investigated.

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "Catena Now Expected to Meet Gambino". The New York Times. August 21, 1975. Retrieved 24 January 2021.
  2. ^ Weiss, Murray (December 6, 2001). "Mob Takes A Hit Undercover Cop Nails 73 Wiseguys". New York Post. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  3. ^ Weiss, Murray (December 17, 2001). "Genovese Allegedly Stole $1 Million from Union Funds". National Legal and Policy Center. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  4. ^ Worth, Robert F. (December 6, 2001). "Indictments Name 73 Linked to the Genovese Crime Family". New York Times. Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  5. ^ a b c McMahon, Paula (February 15, 2012). "South Florida mobster's prison sentence cut in half". Sun Sentinel. Retrieved June 21, 2012.
  6. ^ "Alleged head of Florida Mafia ring arrested: Six others also detained in connection with Genovese crime family". Associated Press. June 30, 2006. Retrieved June 21, 2012.
  7. ^ a b c Sifakis pp. 172
  8. ^ a b The Dying of the Light: The Joseph Valachi Story by Thomas L. Jones (TruTv Crime Library)
  9. ^ "Trash Carter Pleads Guilty to Corruption" New York Times, January 28, 1997 [2]

References

[edit]


Venero Mangano

[edit]

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/manhattan/venero-benny-eggs-mangano-genovese-underboss-dead-95-article-1.3423874

Venero (Benny Eggs) Mangano, longtime underboss of Genovese family, dead at 95 BY Larry Mcshane NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Friday, August 18, 2017, 5:45 PM


Venero (Benny Eggs) Mangano (c.) passed away in Greenwich Village, the neighborhood where he ran his operations.

Legendary mobster Venero “Benny Eggs” Mangano, the hard-boiled underboss of the Genovese crime family under Vincent (The Chin) Gigante, died Friday. He was 95. The old-school Mangano passed away in Greenwich Village, the neighborhood where he spent most of his life and ran his operations out of a Thompson St. social club. Mangano was among the most highly respected Mafiosi among New York’s five organized crime families, rising through the ranks to serve as Gigante’s right-hand man. The longtime Chin loyalist infamously refused to testify at Gigante’s 1997 federal trial when called to the Brooklyn Federal Courthouse by prosecutors.

“What do you want to do, shoot me?” snapped tough guy Mangano. “Shoot me, but I'm not going to answer any questions. I’m tired of these charades.” The mob veteran invoked the Fifth Amendment twice, his dignity and oath of omerta remaining intact. The resolutely old-school Mangano made his exit without giving an inch — or a useful answer — to the feds.

The made man kept his mouth shut across more than 13 years in prison before his Nov. 2, 2006, release. He reportedly returned to serve as part of a rotating panel of veterans overseeing the Genovese family once released.

He was jailed for a 1991 conviction in the “Windows Case,” where the mob made tens of millions of dollars installing new windows in city housing projects. Mangano held the line against the city’s other crime families when they pressed for a bigger piece of the $151 million in business generated by the scam. “It’s all ours,” Mangano declared when the Lucheses and the Gambinos complained about the arrangement. “Nobody’s supposed to touch it.” Mangano’s nickname stemmed from an egg store once run by his mother, back before he served as a World War II tail gunner — with two D-Day bombing runs among his 33 missions.


Mangano’s nickname stemmed from an egg store once run by his mother, back before he served as a World War II tail gunner. (Anthony Pescatore/New York Daily News) The future gangster earned the Distinguished Flying Cross and an air medal with four Oak Leaf Clusters and three Battle Stars for his heroism over Europe. Mangano grew up in the Village as did Gigante, joining the Chin’s crew before his ascension to boss in 1981. The pair was even indicted together nine years later as co-defendants in the Windows case. Mangano was busted four times for bookmaking, and once served eight months in jail for refusing to testify in a Pennsylvania prosecution. His legitimate business was M&J Enterprises, a company that purchased leftover designer clothing for resale overseas. Among his clients: Fashion icon Calvin Klein..

Genovese busted uc

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Undercover G-Man Stings The Powerful Genovese Crime Family August 11, 2016 This Week in Gang Land By Jerry Capeci

Undercover G-Man Stings The Powerful Genovese Crime Family

Shades of Joe Pistone and Big Jack Garcia! A young FBI agent has joined the ranks of those undercover icons by accomplishing the unthinkable: He has stung the Ivy League of organized crime in New York — the powerful, sophisticated Genovese crime family. Posing as a wannabe wiseguy for three plus years, the G-man got close enough to two family capos to tape-record numerous discussions about the crime family's rackets.

Law enforcement sources spoke with awe of the undercover work that led to last week's blockbuster indictment. Among the 46 mobsters and associates of five families snared was Philadelphia mob boss Joseph (Skinny Joey) Merlino and three Genovese capos. They said the results of the agent's secret mission were so good, and linked so many defendants to so many crimes, that it took four months longer for prosecutors to obtain racketeering charges than they had originally planned.

Authorities say the agent — and a mob turncoat who vouched for the G-man — recorded "thousands of hours" of discussions to snare the defendants in a laundry list of criminal activity. The racketeering case alleges illegal gun sales, arson, assault, extortion, credit card scams and health care fraud in addition to the mob's moneymaking staples of bookmaking and loansharking.

"What the undercover did was amazing," said one law enforcement official. "He started out driving, waiting in the car outside while the wiseguys went inside. Then he progressed where he was invited inside to meetings at restaurants and other places. And the FBI had an agent sitting at the table wearing a recorder as capos and other made guys were discussing their business."

Despite his growing acceptance, the ever-wary Genovese leadership still remained out of sight. Sources say the agent "wasn't close" to being proposed for membership, and never met family boss Liborio (Barney) Bellomo, or other top family leaders. But he was a "trusted" associate who drove his immediate mob superiors to the lower Manhattan social club on Market Street run by Peter (Petey Red) DiChiara, whom Gang Land disclosed in February to be a "street boss" for the closeted Bellomo.

Merlino, 54, and two capos, Pasquale (Patsy) Parrello, 72, the owner of Pasquale's Rigoletto in the Bronx, and Eugene (Rooster) O'Nofrio, a convicted cocaine dealer based in Connecticut, are among a handful of arrested defendants who are behind bars as dangers to the community.

According to a court filing, the agent, identified in the indictment as UC-1, served as a driver for O'Nofrio. He "captured hundreds of hours of inculpatory conversations involving O'Nofrio and others" during the last two years of the sting as the 74-year-old capo oversaw the family's Springfield Massachusetts crew as well as one that operated on Mulberry Street.

All told, the sting operation lasted about four and a half years, according to a prosecution memo that sought to detain 11 of the 41 defendants who were arrested in the tri-state area, in Springfield, and in Florida, where Merlino remains behind bars. Two defendants, including Genovese capo Conrad Ianniello, were already in prison on other charges. Three are fugitives.

The investigation began in late 2011, after a longtime Parrello cohort flipped after being jammed up by the Westchester District Attorney's office for an assault when a wiretap picked up two mob associates discussing a baseball bat beating of a panhandler who had bothered women customers of Patsy's restaurant. Gang Land is withholding his name — for now. Court papers say the cooperating witness, CW-1, and a now deceased gangster, Ronald (The Beast) Mastrovincenzo had assaulted the victim in the Bronx in a plot with defendants Israel (Buddy) Torres and Anthony (Anthony Boy) Zinzi. On tape, The Beast was heard explaining the assault to Zinzi: "Remember the old days in the neighborhood when we used to play baseball? A ball game like that was done."

It's unclear if the CW was implicated in other crimes before he turned, or the specifics of his deal, but on December 16, 2011, according to court papers, he tape recorded his first conversation for the feds. In it, he got Vinci to say that he "might have to throw bricks through windows" or have to "break knee caps" to resolve a dispute Parrello was having with a rival gambler whose game was undercutting one that Patsy controlled in Yonkers.

Sometime later, the cooperating witness,introduced the undercover agent around as being "with" Parrello, the Bronx mobster who hosted sitdowns and other business meetings at the popular restaurant he has owned for decades on Arthur Avenue in the Belmont section.

The sting moved into high gear in 2014, sources say, the same year O'Nofrio told the agent that he would soon be promoted to acting capo and take over Ianniello's two crews because the nephew of the late Genovese powerhouse Matthew (Matty The Horse) Ianniello had been convicted of unrelated racketeering charges and would begin a three year prison stretch.

That's when Rooster O'Nofrio "claimed" the UC, and when Parello delegated the CW to work closely with Merlino, especially with lucrative health care scams involving Medicare and other insurance plans that cover prescription pain creams that Skinny Joey was running in Florida, where he moved following his release from federal prison in 2011.

"You're with me now, you work for me now," O'Nofrio told the agent, according to one source.

Taking over Ianniello's crew was a big deal for Rooster, a Connecticut-based soldier. He was finally moving into the big time, he boasted, telling the agent that Ianniello had told him: "I'm going to put you at the helm. I want you acting (crew) boss. I already told them, I want you," according to a court filing.

"I had to go meet certain guys," O'Nofrio told the UC, according to the papers, "First time I met them. They said he (Ianniello) wants you."

On the tapes, O'Nofrio is heard implicating himself in selling untaxed cigarettes, extortion, and loansharking in talks with the agent and with CW-1, court papers say. "Again and again," the papers claim, Rooster "used threats of violence to collect debts." In snippets that cite him as a dangerous felon, he is quoted as saying that a cohort should "crack the guy's ****ing head" to get the money he was owed, and that O'Nofrio would hit another deadbeat "in the head with a ****ing hammer" if he didn't come across with the cash.

Sources say that from 2014 until March of this year, when the covert aspect of the investigation ended, the agent was meeting "almost every day with Rooster." This made life difficult not only for the UC but also for the under-staffed three-person FBI squad — agents William Inzerillo and Joy Adam, along with NYPD detective Andrew Macelhinney — that was running him. The team was with the G-Man all day and night, whenever he was "working," as one source put it.

None of them would talk about the undercover aspect of the case. The FBI, which consistently declines to discuss its reduction of resources against the mob, has also been mum. But several current and former agents who have been involved in other undercover operations agreed to speak anonymously. Most marveled at the accomplishments, of both the UC, and the short-staffed FBI squad that backed him up.

"There's a tremendous amount of grunt work," said one source who has been involved in several stings. "The undercover never goes out without backup, never goes somewhere alone. There are always agents on the outside; they're recording him, their surveilling him, they're there just in case (of a problem.)"

"The FBI hasn't had a guy in like that in more than 10 years," said one source, referring to Jack Garcia the Cuban-born superstar agent who infiltrated the Gambino family in 2003 and helped send more than 30 mobsters and associates to prison, including the family's hierarchy at the time.

"Informers and CWs do it, but anytime you are able to put a good guy at the same table with gangsters, it's a great accomplishment," said Garcia. "This is a law enforcement officer who walked among them, someone without criminal baggage. It's a great investigative technique. It gets information about their crimes. It shows weakness on their part, and it demoralizes the hell out of them, no matter how much their lawyers badmouth it in court."

"When you have a law enforcement officer pose as a bad guy, and convince these so-called wiseguys he's really one of them — and he infiltrates their so-called secret criminal society — it's a feather in the cap of law enforcement," said Garcia. "It's one for the good guys."

It Could Have Been Worse For Skinny Joey, But Not Much

He got hit with racketeering charges anyway, but Philadelphia mob boss Joseph (Skinny Joey) Merlino was spared four months of possibly incriminating conversations about gambling, mob sitdowns and alleged health care scams last year because of an agreement between federal prosecutors in New York and the City of Brotherly Love, Gang Land has learned.

Federal law enforcement sources in both cities say that the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's office initially asked its Philadelphia counterparts not to charge Merlino with violating his strict post-prison restrictions because jailing him would prevent a cooperating witness from taping conversations with him. But eventually it okayed the move by the Philadelphia U.S. Attorney's office to charge him.

As it turned out, Skinny Joey got four months behind bars, but served about 10 days less, when the Third Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the violation on technical gcolumn865.htmrounds, and he was released in early April of last year.

Merlino's three-year supervised release began on September 7, 2011. Less than three months before his restrictions would end, on June 18, 2014, he was spotted meeting Philadelphia wiseguy Joseph Ciacaglini. When FBI agents in New York learned about it, they informed prosecutors, who asked their counterparts to hold off because of their probe.

Initially they did. Eventually, though, according to several sources, New York prosecutor Andrea Kramer acquiesced in the move by the feds in Philly to charge Merlino with VOSR, and they did on August 26, of 2014. But since the official violation wasn't filed until after his supervision ended on September 6, 2014 the appeals court tossed it.

Sources say that months earlier, Genovese capo Patsy Parello released the wired up CW to work closely with Merlino in Florida.

Neither U.S. Attorney's office responded to a request for comment. Merlino, who has spent about half of his life behind bars, wise-cracked to Gang Land last year that his Court of Appeals victory means that next time the feds nail him, "They owe me four months."

But the Manhattan U.S. Attorney's Office decision to go along with the feds in Philadelphia was no laughing matter to several members of the multi-faceted New York probe that included the NYPD, the FBI, and the Westchester District Attorney's office. Said one: "If they had pushed, Philadelphia would have gone along, and we would have had a stronger case."

Sources say Merlino, who relocated to the Sunshine State when he got out of prison, was tape recorded several times by the task force's CW both in New York and in Florida, where he owns Merlino's, an Italian restaurant in Boca Raton, where he lives.

In court papers, prosecutors say that the "overwhelming proof of his guilt" that they have acquired against him in their probe, combined with his previous convictions for racketeering, show that Merlino is a danger to the community and is a threat to flee, and should be detained permanently until trial.

His detention hearing is slated to take place tomorrow in Fort Lauderdale Federal Court.

Preet's Prosecutors Go 0 For 5 In First Round Of Detention Hearings

The prosecution team that Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara assembled for last week's major mob indictment hasn't done very well convincing federal judges in New York and Florida to lock up eleven defendants that prosecutors have deemed to be dangers to the community. As a matter of fact, they have done very badly.

The only gangsters who have been held without bail so far are six mobsters and associates who agreed to detention at their first appearance before a judge in order to come up with a suitable bail package to offer at a later proceeding when his attorney argues for bail.

Judges granted bail for all five defendants who have had bail hearings up until now, rejecting contentions by prosecutors Amanda Kramer, Abigail Kurlan, Jessica Lonergan, Jonathan Rebold, and Lauren Abinanti that they were dangers to the community, or threats to flee before trial.

The quintet includes Alex Conigliaro, 56, of Staten Island, a Genovese soldier charged with two extortions and gambling charges. Magistrate Judge Frank Maas ordered a $1 million personal recognizance bond, co-signed by three relatives and secured by $250,000 in property. Judges also set bail for mob associates Mitchell (Mitch) Fusco, 52, of Yonkers, Harold (Harry) Thomas, 71, and Anthony (Anthony Boy) Zinzi, 73, of the Bronx, and Pasquale (Pat C) Capolongo, of West Palm Beach.

Two defendants — Zinzi, who is at the Metropolitan Correctional Center, and Capolongo, who is detained in Florida — are still behind bars, however. Their releases were stayed when prosecutors filed notice they are appealing those findings to the Manhattan Federal Court Judge assigned to the case, Richard Sullivan.

New York Magistrate Judge Barbara Moses set a personal recognizance bond of $200,000 for Zinzi, a longtime Parrello associate with prior convictions for homicide and drug dealing. He is charged with arson, assault, three extortions, loansharking, and the illegal sale of weapons.

West Palm Beach Magistrate Judge William Matthewman set a $2 million personal recognizance bond co-signed by three relatives for Capolongo, 67, a longtime bookmaker-loanshark with a dozen prior convictions who is also currently waiting trial on racketeering charges in Florida.

In arguing for his detention, prosecutors contended that a 2014 conversation recorded by the Queens District Attorney's office showed that Pat C had placed a tracking device on the CW's car over a $30,000 debt and that he then encouraged a cohort to whack the CW if he had any trouble with him — without ever knowing that he was a cooperating witness.

"If Capolongo was willing to go to such lengths to collect a gambling debt, the government has grave concerns about what he would do in retaliation for cooperating with the government," the prosecutors stated in asking Judge Sullivan to overturn the Florida judge's decision.

In an 11-page ruling, Matthewman criticized the government for having a stand-in FBI agent from Miami with no first-hand knowledge of the case testify about what a New York agent had told him about Capolongo and the CW, and found that "the government's evidence that Capolongo constitutes a danger to CW-I and CW-1's family was not substantial or compelling."

In addition to Zinzi and Capolongo, the other defendants still behind bars pending bail hearings are: Genovese soldier Ralph Balsamo, 46, of the Bronx, mob associates Israel (Buddy) Torres, 66, of Queens, and Mark (Stymie) Maiuzzo, 37, of Scarsdale, and the trio charged as the leaders of the racketeering conspiracy, Patsy Parrello, Skinny Joey Merlino and Rooster O'Norfio.

the Indictment

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Manhattan U.S. Attorney Charges 46 Leaders, Members, And Associates Of Several Organized Crime Families Of La Cosa Nostra With Wide-Ranging Racketeering Charges Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, Diego Rodriguez, Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), William J. Bratton, Commissioner of the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), and James A. McCarty, Acting District Attorney for Westchester County, announced today the unsealing of an Indictment charging 46 defendants for their alleged roles in a sprawling and long-running racketeering conspiracy composed of leaders, members, and associates of the Genovese, Gambino, Luchese, Bonanno, and Philadelphia Organized Crime Families of La Cosa Nostra (“LCN”), who worked together to engage in a multitude of criminal activities throughout the East Coast of the United States between Springfield, Massachusetts, and Southern Florida (the “East Coast LCN Enterprise” or the “Enterprise”).  The defendants are charged with racketeering conspiracy, arson, illegal trafficking in firearms, and conspiracy to commit assault in aid of racketeering.  Thirty-nine of the defendants charged were taken into custody today.  During the arrests, law enforcement officers recovered, among other items, three handguns, a shotgun, gambling paraphernalia, and more than $30,000 in cash. Two defendants, CONRAD IANNIELLO and PASQUALE MAIORINO, a/k/a “Patty Boy,” were already in federal custody on other charges.  Another defendant, JOHN LEMBO, was already in custody on state charges and will be transferred to federal custody.  Six defendants, JOSEPH MERLINO, a/k/a “Joey,” PASQUALE CAPOLONGO, a/k/a “Patsy,” a/k/a “Pat C.,” a/k/a “Mustache Pat,” a/k/a “Fish,” FRANK TRAPANI, a/k/a “Harpo,” CARMINE GALLO, CRAIG BAGON, BRADLEY SIRKIN, a/k/a “Brad,” were arrested this morning in Florida, and will be presented in federal court in West Palm Beach later today.  Two defendants, FRANCESCO DEPERGOLA, a/k/a “Frank,” and RALPH SANTANIELLO were arrested this morning in Massachusetts, where they face additional federal charges, and will be presented in federal court in Springfield, Massachusetts later today.  All other defendants arrested today will be presented in Manhattan federal court before U.S. Magistrate Judges Barbara Moses, Frank Maas, and Gabriel W. Gorenstein this afternoon.  Two defendants, NICHOLAS DEVITO, a/k/a “Nicky,” and ANTHONY CIRILLO, surrendered today.  One defendant, HAROLD THOMAS, a/k/a “Harry,” is expected to surrender in the next few days.  Three defendants, ANTHONY CAMISA, a/k/a “Anthony the Kid,” LAURENCE KEITH ALLEN, a/k/a “Keith Allen,” and WAYNE KREISBERG remain at large.  The case is assigned to United States District Judge Richard J. Sullivan. Manhattan U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara said: “Today’s charges against 46 men, including powerful leaders, members and associates of five different La Cosa Nostra families, demonstrate that the mob remains a scourge on this city and around the country.  From loansharking and illegal gambling, to credit card and health care fraud, and even firearms trafficking, today’s mafia is fully diversified in its boundless search for illegal profits.  And as alleged, threatening to assault, maim and kill people who get in the way of their criminal schemes remains the go-to play in the mob’s playbook.” FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Diego Rodriguez said:  “The indictment reads like an old school mafia novel, where extortion, illegal gambling, arson and threats to ‘whack’ someone are carried out along with some modern-day crimes of credit card skimming. But the 40-plus arrests of mob associates, soldiers, capos, and a boss this morning show this isn’t fiction. As alleged, Genovese, Gambino, Luchese, and Bonanno LCN crime families are still carrying out their criminal activities from Mulberry Street here in New York City to areas of Springfield, Massachusetts. The FBI, working with our task force partners from the New York Police Department, are just as steadfast investigating and rooting out organized crime as wise guys are to bringing it our streets. We thank all our partners on this multi-year investigation, including the FBI field offices from New Haven, Newark, Miami and Boston for their assistance with operations.” NYPD Commissioner William J. Bratton said:  “The charges applied today to these 46 individuals deal a significant blow to La Cosa Nostra, which the NYPD is committed to putting out of business.  As alleged, in typical mob fashion, the rackets ran from Springfield to South Florida and left no scheme behind. These mobsters seemed to use every scheme known to us, from arson, to shake-downs, violence, health care fraud, and even untaxed cigarettes to keep the racket going.  I want to thank my friends Preet Bharara and Diego Rodriguez for their work at the Justice Department and FBI for making today’s case possible and their collaborative efforts during my tenure as Commissioner of the NYPD.”    Westchester County Acting District Attorney James A. McCarty said: “I want to congratulate the prosecutors and investigators whose combined efforts resulted in today’s indictment.  Those charged with these crimes believe they can commit them at will, undetected and without consequence.  These dedicated members of law enforcement through their actions, have made it clear that those individuals who commit these crimes will be rooted out.” According to the allegations in the Indictment[1], which was filed in Manhattan federal court, and other publicly filed documents: The instant charges are the culmination of a multi-year joint investigation conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”), FBI-NYPD Organized Crime Task Force, the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office, the New York City Police Department (“NYPD”), and this Office.  The evidence includes thousands of hours of consensual recordings obtained by a cooperating witness (“CW-1”) and an FBI Special Agent working in an undercover capacity (“UC-1”).  CW-1 worked under PASQUALE PARRELLO, a/k/a “Patsy,” believed to be a Genovese Capo in charge of a crew based out of a restaurant that bears his name in the Bronx, New York (Pasquale’s Rigoletto, hereinafter “Rigoletto”).  At one point, with PARRELLO’S approval, CW-1 began working under JOSEPH MERLINO, a/k/a “Joey,” believed to be the Boss of the Philadelphia Crime Family, who resided in southern Florida for part of the year.  UC-1 worked under EUGENE O’NOFRIO, a/k/a “Rooster,” a Genovese Acting Capo in charge of crews on Mulberry Street in New York, New York, and Springfield, Massachusetts.  As evidenced by the consensual recordings made by CW-1 and UC-1, the myriad criminal schemes pursued by PARRELLO, MERLINO, O’NOFRIO, and their underlings were in many respects intertwined. The Enterprise charged in the Indictment is composed of leaders, members, and associates of the Genovese, Gambino, Luchese, Bonanno, and Philadelphia Crime Families of LCN, who worked together and coordinated with each other to engage in a multitude of criminal activities throughout the East Coast of the United States, including in Springfield, Massachusetts, the Bronx and Manhattan, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and Southern Florida.  The members of the Enterprise have been involved in gambling, extortionate collection of loans, other extortion activities, arson, conspiracies to commit assaults in aid of racketeering, trafficking in unstamped and cigarettes, gun trafficking, access device fraud, and health care fraud.  The members of the Enterprise include, but are not limited to, PASQUALE PARRELLO, a/k/a “Patsy,” a/k/a “Pat,” JOSEPH MERLINO, a/k/a “Joey,” EUGENE O’NOFRIO, a/k/a “Rooster,” CONRAD IANNIELLO, ISRAEL TORRES, a/k/a “Buddy,” ANTHONY ZINZI, a/k/a “Anthony Boy,” ANTHONY VAZZANO, a/k/a “Tony the Wig,” a/k/a “Muscles,” ALEX CONIGLIARO, FRANK BARBONE, RALPH BALSAMO, PASQUALE MAIORINO, a/k/a “Patty Boy,” JOHN SPIRITO, a/k/a “Johnny Joe,” VINCENT CASABLANCA, a/k/a “Vinny,” MARCO MINUTO, PAUL CASSANO, a/k/a “Paul Cassone,” DANIEL MARINO, JR., a/k/a “Danny,” JOHN LEMBO, a/k/a “Johnny,” MITCHELL FUSCO, a/k/a “Mitch,” REYNOLD ALBERTI, a/k/a “Randy,” VINCENT TERRACCIANO, a/k/a “Big Vinny,” JOSEPH TOMANELLI, a/k/a “Joe,” AGOSTINO CAMACHO, a/k/a “Augie,” NICHOLAS DEVITO, a/k/a “Nicky,” ANTHONY CASSETTA, a/k/a “Tony the Cripple,” NICHOLAS VUOLO, a/k/a “Nicky the Wig,” BRADFORD WEDRA, MICHAEL POLI, a/k/a “Mike Polio,” PASQUALE CAPOLONGO, a/k/a “Patsy,” a/k/a “Pat C.,” a/k/a “Mustache Pat,” a/k/a “Fish,” ANTHONY DEPALMA, a/k/a “Harpo,” a/k/a “Harp,” JOHN TOGNINO, a/k/a “Tugboat,” MARK MAIUZZO, a/k/a “Stymie,” JOSEPH DIMARCO, HAROLD THOMAS, a/k/a “Harry,” RICHARD LACAVA, a/k/a “Richie,” VINCENT THOMAS, a/k/a “Vinny,” ANTHONY CAMISA, a/k/a “Anthony the Kid,” FRANK TRAPANI, a/k/a “Harpo,” ANTHONY CIRILLO, CARMINE GALLO, JOSEPH FALCO, a/k/a “Joe Cub,” FRANCESCO DEPERGOLA, a/k/a “Frank,” RALPH SANTANIELLO, LAURENCE KEITH ALLEN, a/k/a “Keith Allen,” CRAIG BAGON, BRADLEY SIRKIN, a/k/a “Brad,” and WAYNE KREISBERG, the defendants. To protect and expand the Enterprise’s business and criminal operations, members and associates of the Enterprise assaulted, threatened to assault, and destroyed the property of people who engaged in activity that jeopardized: (i) the power and criminal activities of the Enterprise and the power and criminal activities of their respective LCN Families; (ii) the power of leaders of the Enterprise; and (iii) the flow of criminal proceeds to the leaders of the Enterprise.  Members and associates of the Enterprise promoted a climate of fear in the community through threats of economic harm and violence, as well as actual violence, including assault and arson.  Members and associates of the Enterprise generated or attempted to generate income for the Enterprise through firearms trafficking, extortion, operating illegal gambling businesses, health care fraud, credit card fraud, selling untaxed cigarettes, making extortionate extensions of credit, and other offenses.  Members and associates of the Enterprise at times engaged in criminal conduct or coordinated their criminal activities with leaders, members, and associates of their respective LCN Families.  At other times, members and associates of the Enterprise met with leaders, members, and associates of their respective LCN Families to resolve disputes over their criminal activities. Enterprise members PASQUALE PARRELLO, a/k/a “Patsy,” a/k/a “Pat,” JOSEPH MERLINO, a/k/a “Joey,” and EUGENE O’NOFRIO, a/k/a “Rooster,” the defendants, supervised and controlled other members of the Enterprise engaged in illegal schemes, including those that were the objects of the conspiracy.  At various times, members and associates of the Enterprise (including those who are leaders, members, and associates of different LCN families) met, coordinated, and worked together with PARRELLO, MERLINO, and O’NOFRIO, and each other, as well as other members and associates of their respective LCN Families, to engage in criminal activity. To avoid law enforcement scrutiny, members and associates of the Enterprise conducted meetings surreptitiously, typically using coded language to make arrangements for meetings, and meeting at rest stops along highways and at restaurants. Certain members and associates of the Enterprise engaged in and conspired to engage in the following violent crimes:  Arson of Vehicle Belonging to Victim-1 In early 2011, an individual (“Victim-1”) operated an illegal gambling establishment on Saw Mill River Road, Yonkers, New York, which was around the corner from a similar establishment (the “Yonkers Club”) run by ANTHONY ZINZI, a/k/a “Anthony Boy,” and other associates of the charged Enterprise.  ZINZI and others paid PARRELLO tribute from the profits from the Yonkers Club.  While PARRELLO was on federal supervision stemming from a federal conviction in this Court, the Yonkers Club struggled.  Indeed, Victim-1’s club was more successful than the Yonkers Club.  ZINZI suggested to other members of the conspiracy that they light Victim-1’s vehicle on fire while it was outside of Victim-1’s club.  Then, on or about March 7, 2011, co-defendant MARK MAIUZZO, a/k/a “Stymie,” and others not charged in the above-referenced Indictment located Victim-1’s vehicle, poured gasoline into the vehicle, and lit it on fire. Conspiracy to Assault and Assault of Victim-2 On or about June 5 and 6, 2011, PARRELLO ordered ZINZI and Ronald “The Beast” Mastrovincenzo (now deceased) to assault a panhandler (“Victim-2”) in the area of Arthur Avenue and Fordham Road, Bronx, New York.  ZINZI and Mastrovincenzo enlisted the help of ISRAEL TORRES, a/k/a “Buddy,” and others.  Victim-2 had been bothering some female customers in the parking lot nearby Rigoletto, and these women complained to PARRELLO.  ZINZI, TORRES, Mastrovincenzo, and others, on PARRELLO’s orders to “break” Victim-2’s knees, went looking for Victim-2.  Eventually, Victim-2 was beaten by Mastrovincenzo and CW-1 (prior to CW-1’s cooperation with the Government).   A New York State wiretap revealed that after the beating, Mastrovincenzo told ZINZI, in sum and substance: “[r]emember the old days in the neighborhood when we used to play baseball? . . . A ball game like that was done.”  After the beating, TORRES and ZINZI helped Mastrovincenzo and CW-1 in hiding and disposing of evidence.  Conspiracy to Extort Victim-1 PASQUALE CAPOLONGO, a/k/a “Patsy,” a/k/a “Pat C.,” a/k/a “Mustache Pat,” a/k/a “Fish,” a Luchese associate and longtime bookmaker, placed large bets on behalf of several “professional gamblers,” to help conceal their status as professionals.  CAPOLONGO also placed bets himself as a gambler.  In 2011, CW-1 gave CAPOLONGO access to gambling accounts controlled by individuals known as bookmakers so that CAPOLONGO could place bets on those accounts on behalf of professional gamblers.  In turn, CW-1 received approximately 10 percent of the winnings and was also responsible to the bookmaker for the losses.  As part of this arrangement, in late 2011, CAPOLONGO obtained betting accounts on Victim-1’s book through CW-1.  In December 2011, CAPOLONGO, on behalf of his bettors, won approximately $30,000 from sports wagers CAPOLONGO placed in Victim-1’s book.  Victim-1 refused to pay CAPOLONGO.  On or about December 12, 2011, CW-1 met with PARRELLO and explained that CAPOLONGO won approximately $30,000 on sports wagers and that CW-1 was unable to collect because Victim-1 was refusing to pay despite CW-1’s affiliation with PARRELLO.  CW-1 asked PARRELLO to intervene on his behalf and sought assistance in collecting the approximately $30,000 debt from Victim-1.  PARRELLO agreed to help collect the debt.   Between about December 2011 and March 2014, PARRELLO sent ZINZI, TORRES, VINCENT TERRACCIANO, a/k/a “Big Vinny,” and others to threaten and intimidate Victim-1, and collect the money for the debt.  On one such occasion, PARRELLO told them: “You get Buddy [TORRES] and let Buddy go there and choke him [Victim-1], choke him.  I want Buddy to choke him, choke him, actually choke the motherfucker…and tell him, ‘Listen to me…next time I’m not gonna stop choking… I’m gonna kill you.’”  Conspiracy to Extort Victim-3 Victim-3 was working as a bookmaker and had accounts with defendant JOHN TOGNINO, a/k/a “Tugboat,” who worked under by ALEX CONIGLIARO.  CONIGLIARO suspected that Victim-3 had allowed professional bettors to place bets and, as a result of their winning bets, CONIGLIARO owed approximately $400,000 to the winning bettors.  On or about February 21, 2012, PARRELLO summoned Victim-3 to Rigoletto.  There, CONIGLIARO, PARRELLO, and IANNIELLO confronted Victim-3 in a small room in the basement of the restaurant, threatening and intimidating him.  Ultimately, CONIGLIARO refused to pay the money owed. Conspiracy to Extort Victim-4 An unindicted co-conspirator (“CC-1”) operated a gambling club in the Bronx, New York.  CC-1 was affiliated with PARRELLO, and, from in or about 2012 to in or about 2013, CC-1 paid PARRELLO approximately $500 per week in tribute in connection with the Bronx gambling club.  Another individual, Victim-4, owed tens of thousands of dollars to CC-1.  PARRELLO directed CW-1 to find Victim-4 to collect the money.  TORRES and co-defendant JOHN SPIRITO, a/k/a “Johnny Joe,” a made member of the Bonanno family, tried to get a picture of Victim-4.  The plan was to identify Victim-4, bring Victim-4 to an isolated area, and confront Victim-4 about the debt. Conspiracy to Extort Victim-5 Victim-5 was a gambler who gave CW-1 access to gambling accounts.  As a result, Victim-5 incurred a debt that he did not pay.  At the same time, Victim-5 separately owed money to defendants VINCENT CASABLANCA, a/k/a “Vinny,” and PASQUALE MAIORINO, a/k/a “Patty Boy,” members of the Luchese and Bonanno crime families, respectively.  PARRELLO worked with others, including members of the Genovese and Bonanno crime families, to ensure that Victim-5 paid the debt.  Among other things, PARRELLO stated, in a recorded conversation, that members of PARRELLO’s crew should: [C]ut his [Victim-5’s] fuckin’ tire.  That way he has to change the tire.  So then you know you can catch up with him. Give him a flat.  Take the air out of the tire, whatever the fuck you got to do.  Then you catch up with him because then he’s there, ya know, he’s got to get it fixed, he can’t go nowhere, and then you surround the mother fucker.  That’s how yous do it. PARRELLO further stated, “go ahead, get this motherfucker.  Don’t make a mistake.  Get your fuckin’ money.”  Co-defendant ZINZI provided an icepick to use to slash the tire of Victim-5’s car in order to carry out PARRELLO’s order.  Eventually, Victim-5 agreed to make weekly payments on Victim-5’s outstanding debt.  Conspiracy to Assault Victim-6 On or about January 22, 2013, Genovese associate and defendant ANTHONY VAZZANO, a/k/a “Tony the Wig,” a/k/a “Muscles,” was stabbed in the neck by Victim-6 during an altercation at a bar in the Bronx, New York (the “Bar”).  VAZZANO was at the Bar with Mastrovincenzo and others when the stabbing occurred.  After that, associates of PARRELLO’s crew, including Mastrovincenzo and TORRES, among others, at PARRELLO’s direction, agreed to assault Victim-6 in retaliation for the stabbing.  During one such conversation, TORRES stated that they would “whack” and “maim this mother fucker [Victim-6].”  PARRELLO instructed Mastrovincenzo to “keep the pipes handy and pipe him, pipe him, over here [gesturing to the knees], not on his head.”      Gun Trafficking Between about January and March 2012, MITCHELL FUSCO, a/k/a “Mitch,” sold eleven firearms on three separate dates to CW-1.  Mastrovincenzo also sold guns to CW-1 and the Enterprise, including six firearms on five separate occasions between 2012 and 2013.  During a June 27, 2012 consensually recorded conversation, PARRELLO asked CW-1 if the guns were “clean” and directed CW-1 to “get some nines.” On or about August 20, 2012, CW-1 met with Mastrovincenzo and ZINZI.  During this recorded meeting, Mastrovincenzo asked CW-1 and ZINZI how many guns he should get, and ZINZI told Mastrovincenzo, “at least a hundred.”  Additional Criminal Activity In addition to the violent crimes described above, members and associates also conspired to, and in some cases did, work together and coordinate with each other to perpetrate a number of other crimes. a.         Loansharking.  Members of the East Coast LCN Enterprise, including, but not limited to, PARRELLO, O’NOFRIO, HAROLD THOMAS, VINCENT THOMAS, a/k/a “Vinny,” FRANCESCO DEPERGOLA, a/k/a “Frank,” and RALPH SANTANIELLO, the defendants regularly made and took extortionate loans (“loansharking”) as part of the business of the East Coast LCN Enterprise.  In connection with one such loan, HAROLD THOMAS said to AGOSTINO CAMACHO, a/k/a “Augie,” who owed an outstanding debt to HAROLD THOMAS: “If you don’t have my money the first of the month you will never hear another sound I give you [my] word on that. . . . If you miss don’t call me.  You’ve had enough breaks.  I’ve just given you the biggest break in your life. . . . [I]n about a minute I’m going to go over to the car and take the fucking pistol and I’m going to kill you.” b.         Gambling.  Illegal gambling was a significant part of the regular course of business of certain members of the East Coast LCN Enterprise.  Dozens of members of the Enterprise engaged in two different types of illegal gambling activities as a way to generate money for the Enterprise: (1) casino-style club gambling and (2) sports gambling.   i.          Casino-Style Club Gambling.  At various times relevant to the Indictment, PARRELLO, TORRES, ZINZI, VAZZANO, CAMACHO, and MAIUZZO, a/k/a “Stymie,” the defendants operated the above-mentioned Yonkers Club.  Several nights a week, the Yonkers Club held poker tournaments, dice tournaments, and took bets on horse races.  The owners of the Yonkers Club (the “House”) took a percentage of the gambling proceeds.  Additionally, the Yonkers Club generated profits through the installation of illegal poker machines.  ii.         Sports Gambling.  At various times relevant to the Indictment, multiple members of the East Coast LCN Enterprise operated several gambling operations as a way to enrich the Enterprise. Members of the Enterprise, playing different roles in the sports gambling operations, utilized gambling websites based in the United States and abroad to keep track of wagers and proceeds.  c.         Cigarettes.  Receiving, causing others to receive, and profiting from the purchase of contraband cigarettes was part of the regular business of certain members of the East Coast LCN Enterprise, including, but not limited to, PARRELLO, O’NOFRIO, TORRES, ZINZI, VAZZANO, SPIRITO, CASABLANCA, REYNOLD ALBERTI, a/k/a “Randy,” TERRACCIANO, JOSEPH TOMANELLI, a/k/a “Joe,” CAMACHO, NICHOLAS DEVITO, a/k/a “Nicky,” NICHOLAS VUOLO, a/k/a “Nicky the Wig,” BRADFORD WEDRA, HAROLD THOMAS, RICHARD LACAVA, a/k/a “Richie,” and VINCENT THOMAS, the defendants.  At various times relevant to the Indictment, these defendants obtained, caused others to obtain, and profited from the obtaining of, hundreds of cases of contraband cigarettes, which did not bear a stamp evincing payment of applicable cigarette taxes, with a street value of more than approximately $3 million.  d.         Credit Card Fraud Conspiracy.  In or around 2012, PARRELLO, TORRES, PASQUALE MAIORINO, a/k/a “Patty Boy,” JOHN LEMBO, a/k/a “Johnny,” and ALBERTI, the defendants, and others known and unknown, conspired to obtain and use a credit card “skimmer” — a small device that captures and retains unwitting credit card owners’ personal identifying information — to steal credit card information and use the information to create new fraudulent credit cards which could, in turn, be used to make unauthorized purchases.  e.         Health Care Fraud.  At various times relevant to the Indictment, PARRELLO, MERLINO, RALPH BALSAMO, CAMACHO, DEVITO, MICHAEL POLI, a/k/a “Mike Polio,” CARMINE GALLO, BRAD SIRKIN, a/k/a “Brad,” and WAYNE KREISBERG, the defendants, were involved in a scheme targeting providers of health insurance (the “Victim Insurers”), by causing, and causing others to cause, corrupt doctors to issue unnecessary and excessive prescriptions for expensive compound cream (“Prescription Compound Cream”) that were then billed to the Victim Insurers.  Had the Victim Insurers known the fraudulent nature of the scheme — that wrongful kickbacks were paid to doctors to write, and to patients to request and receive, unnecessary and excessive prescriptions for the Prescription Compound Cream — the Victim Insurers would not have issued reimbursements for the Prescription Compound Cream.

  •           *          *

A chart containing the ages, residency information, and charges against the defendants, as well as the maximum penalties they face is attached.  The maximum penalties are prescribed by Congress and are provided here for informational purposes only, as any sentencing of the defendant will be determined by the judge. Mr. Bharara praised the work of the Federal Bureau of Investigation in this case. He thanked the NYPD for their assistance. Mr. Bharara also noted that the investigation is continuing. Assistant U.S. Attorneys Amanda Kramer, Abigail Kurland, Jessica Lonergan, and Jonathan Rebold, along with Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Lauren Abinanti of the Westchester County District Attorney’s Office, are in charge of the prosecution.  The case is being handled by the Office’s Violent and Organized Crime Unit. The charges contained in the Indictment are merely accusations, and the defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty. UNITED STATES V.  PARRELLO, ET AL.   DEFENDANT AGE CITY OF RESIDENCE CHARGES MAX SENT. Alberti, Reynold 47 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Allen, Laurence Keith 46 Costa Rica 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Bagon, Craig 56 Boca Raton, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Balsamo, Ralph 46 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Barbone, Frank 44 Queens, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Camacho, Agostino 40 Yonkers, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Camisa, Anthony 24 Unknown 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Capolongo, Pasquale 67 West Palm Beach, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Casablanca, Vincent 49 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Cassano, Paul 37 Nanuet, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Cassetta, Anthony 48 Belmar, NJ 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Cirillo, Anthony 51 Englewood Cliffs, NJ 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Conigliaro, Alex 56 Staten Island, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Depalma, Anthony 70 Stony Point, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Depergola, Francesco 60 Springfield, MA 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Devito, Nicholas 64 Monticello, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years DiMarco, Joseph 46 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Falco, Joseph 72 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Fusco, Mitchell 52 Yonkers, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 18 U.S.C. § 922(a)(1)(A) & 18 U.S.C. 2 20 years 5 years Gallo, Carmine 38 Delray Beach, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Ianniello, Conrad 72 In Custody 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Kreisberg, Wayne 39 Parkland, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years LaCava, Richard 67 Pelham, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Lembo, John 50 In Custody 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Maiorino, Pasquale 56 In Custody 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Maiuzzo, Mark 37 Scarsdale, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), 18 U.S.C. § 844(h) & 18 U.S.C. § 2 20 years 10 years Marino, Jr., Daniel 49 Short Hills, NJ 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Merlino, Joseph 54 Boca Raton, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Minuto, Marco 80 Upper Saddle River, NJ 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years O’Nofrio, Eugene 74 East Haven, CT 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Parrello, Pasquale 72 Tuckahoe, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(6) 20 years 20 years Poli, Michael 31 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Santaniello, Ralph 49 Longmeadow, MA 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Sirkin, Bradley 54 Boca Raton, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Spirito, John 34 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Terracciano, Vincent 40 Yonkers, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Thomas, Harold 71 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Thomas, Vinny 69 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Tognino, John 74 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Tomanelli, Joseph 70 Yonkers, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Torres, Israel 66 Queens, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), 18 U.S.C. § 1959(a)(6) 20 years 20 years Trapani, Frank 63 Boca Raton, FL 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Vazzano, Anthony 51 Brewster, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Vuolo, Nicholas 71 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Wedra, Bradford 61 Mt. Vernon, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d) 20 years Zinzi, Anthony 73 Bronx, NY 18 U.S.C. § 1962(d), 18 U.S.C. § 844(h) & 18 U.S.C. § 2 20 years 10 years

https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/pr/manhattan-us-attorney-charges-46-leaders-members-and-associates-several-organized-crime

https://www.justice.gov/usao-sdny/file/882166/download

Genovese MA crew

[edit]

https://mafiagenealogy.wordpress.com/2017/11/01/the-bosses-of-springfield-massachusetts/


https://gangsterreport.com/the-ralphie-question-where-does-younger-santaniello-stand-in-springfield-ma-mob-regime/

Bonanno family

[edit]
  • Giuseppe "Peppe" Bonanno;; was the older brother to Salvatore and Stefano Bonanno. He died in 1901.pg.27 (A Man of Honor: The Autobiography of Joseph Bonanno By Joseph Bonanno)
  • Salvatore "Don Turridu" Bohannon;; came to New York City with his wife Caterina Bonventre and son Giuseppe. He returned to Italy in 1911, and died of a heart attack in 1915. (Organized Crime by Howard Abadinsky) pg.104-107
  • Joe Parrino; was never boss; pg.106 Bonanno family

Joseph Cammarno Street boss;. http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/exclusive-mob-boss-rebuilding-left-crime-family-article-1.2499943

  • Galante pic;
  • Image of Carmine Galante's here. The picture is a New York Daily News front cover (I don't known if it can be uploaded but found this as an example here.

Crews

[edit]
  • Maspeth -- Rusty, Joe Massino, {Anthony Urso - Maspeth "was Massino driver"} // Louis "Louie Electric" DeCicco// Anthony "Little Anthony" Pipitone
  • Ozone Park Crew -- Phillip Giaccone, Joseph "Joe Desi" DeSimone
    • Split from Giaccone -- Long Island Crew -- Thomas DiFiore (spilt from Giaccone) // John "Johnny Mulberry" Sciremammano (Long Island; "possibly acting")
  • Greenpoint Crew/Long Island -- Nicholas Santora // acting capo Vito Badamo // members of Santora crew -- Ernest Aiello, Anthony "Skinny" Santoro, Dominick Siano, Nicholas Bernhard, Scott O'Neil, Anthony Urban and Richard Sinde // old member of motion crew -- Anthony Rabito
  • Bensonhurst Crew/Staten Island -- Anthony Spero, Vincent Badalamenti, acting capo Vito Balsamo
    • Split from Bensonhurst 1980s-- Brooklyn/Staten Island Crew -- Anthony Graziano (his mentor was Anthony Spero) // Joe Lefty" Loiacono (acting) // John "Porky" Zancocchio (former Napolitano crew; moved to Staten Island Graziano crew after he married Graziano's daughter; Zancocchio took over the crew after Joe Loiacono) // Anthony Calabrese (only a soldier in Staten Island) // ---- could be George "Grumpy" Tropiano (indicted along with Zancocchio and a lot of Bensonhurst guys in 2018)
  • Staten Island/Florida crew -- Gerald Chilli (Staten Island/Florida drugs) // John "Big John" Contello (arrested in 2009 with Gerald Chilli he was listed "as capo") // unknow ???
  • Manhattan/Lower East Side -- Frank Lino, Al Indelicato
  • Bronx crew -- William “Big Willie” Riviello // Anthony Frascone // John Spirito Jr // John Palazzolo // Joseph "Joe Valet" Sabella

  • Missing Manhattan, Staten Island ??
  • Peter Lovaglio/54 - Staten Island became a informant (?? could have been before Sclafani??)

--

  • In 2019 the boss even shelved Joe C’s father-in-law Vito Grimaldi and brother-in-law Joseph Grimaldi. Both mobsters were capos and part of the families Sicilian faction.

Nicholas Santora July 2013

[edit]

[1]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Buettner, Russ; Rashbaum (July 9, 2013). "Bonanno Family Members Are Accused of Branching Out Online and Into Pills". New York Times. Retrieved August 3, 2013.

References

[edit]
  • Saggio, Frankie and Rosen, Fred. Born to the Mob: The True-Life Story of the Only Man to Work for All Five of New York's Mafia Families. Running Press, 2004. ISBN 1560255595.
  • DeStefano, Anthony M. Mob Killer. Pinnacle Books, 2011. ISBN 0786028580.

Colombo

[edit]

Luca DiMatteo

[edit]

https://www.justice.gov/usao-edny/pr/colombo-crime-family-captain-and-two-associates-charged-racketeering-conspiracy

https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/colombo-mobster-years-100-000-shakedown-article-1.2877553

New England

[edit]

Connecticut …..

[9]

  • The Colombo crime family, operating in Massachusetts, cities of Somerville, and Boston and parts of Rhode Island. (Martin Finucane and Shelley Murphy. Four charged with membership in Mafia-connected crew. December 17, 2009. [10]) ..
  • Bulleted list item

Buffalo family

[edit]

Buffalo and outlaw MC 2021

  • FBI Chart 2006.
  • Boss: Joseph Edward Todaro Sr. born 9/18/23
  • Soldiers: Felix Borelli born 5/1/1910. Leonard Falzone 1/26/1935. Frank Inserra IV 1/20/1931. Benjamin "Sonny" Nicoletti 2/12/1939. Joseph Rosato 4/12/1935. Vincent Scro 7/28/1924. Vincent "Jimmy" Sicurella 12/23/1940. Rocco Vaccaro 4/15/1916.

  • Boss: Joseph Todaro Jr.
  • Underboss: Domenico Violi (Canada Faction)
  • Consigliere: Unknown (suspected that Victor Sansanese became consigliere in 2012)
  • Capo: West Side Buffalo/BiFulco Crew: Frank "Butchie Bifocals" BiFulco - overseer of Buffalo rackets and labor interests. Former capo was Frank Falzone.
  • Capo: Utica Crew: Russell Carcone - Utica area six soldiers
  • Capo: Hamilton Canada/Luppino Crew: Natale Luppino - Nine soldiers, took over crew when Violi was moved up to Underboss, who in turn had taken over when Vincent Luppino passed away in 2009.
  • Capo: Niagara Falls Crew: Unknown, was Benjamin "Sonny" Nicoletti Jr. (died) before he died.
  • Soldiers: (Buffalo area)
  • Victor Sansanese
  • Robert "Bobby" Panaro Jr. (base in La Vegas)

  • No References
  • Papalia-Hamilton Crew/Capo --- Bruno Monaco (took over when Dante Gasbarrini passed away) // Dominic Italiano or Joseph Joey Paps" Pugliese - overseer of the Southern Ontario rackets in the Niagara region, Hamilton and Toronto area.
  • Capo -- Anthony Todaro Buffalo, Eight soldiers, took over when his brother Joe Jr retired.
  • Capo -- Loren Piccarreto/Anthony Chirico- Rochester, Five soldiers. When Thomas Marotta came back in the 1990's, he decided to join the Bonanno family and took half of the independent family with him to the Bonanno family. After what happened up in Hamiliton with John Papalia, Rene Piccarreto decided to be more friendlier with Buffalo. When Joe "Lead Pipe Joe" Todaro retired in 2006, Angelo Amico decided to rejoin the Buffalo Family.
  • sidenote - Gaetano "Tommy Chooch" Miceli was a former caporegime and overseer of the Buffalo crime family's North Buffalo, New York rackets which included North side gambling operations and Buffalo's annual Italian festival held on Hertal Ave.
  • sidenote - Matthew "Steamboat" Billiteri is a Buffalo crime family member who may have been promoted to caporegime or acting capo status within the Buffalo, New York area in order to take over the crew of his brother Albert "Babe" Billiteri who is presently inactive and retired.

  • Captain: Frank "Butchie Bifocals" BiFulco b.1945 -- Buffalo
  • Soldiers:
  • Robert "Bobby" Panaro Jr.
  • Victor Sansanese b.1945. Brother of the late Daniel G. Sansanese, Jr.
  • John A. Pieri
  • Joseph R. Pieri Jr. (died)
  • Pasquale "Paddy" Brindisi b.1942
  • Robert "Bobby" Colao (not sure)
  • Frank Falzone b.1950
  • Peter Gerace b.1927 maybe retired
  • Frank Grisanti
  • Samuel "Sam" Lagattuta Jr.
  • Richard Todaro
  • Louis Tavano b.1941
  • Joseph Randazzo
  • Salvatore "Sam" Cardinale
  • Captain: Russell "Russ" Carcone b.1954 Utica
  • Soldiers:
  • Philip "Phil" Corelli b.1963
  • James "Jimmy" Feliciano b.1977. Involved in the shoplifting ring with Russell Carcone.
  • Frank Ferraro b.1943
  • Frank Marino b.1940
  • Pasquale "Paddy" Brindisi - Member of the Utica Crew.
  • Captain: Joseph "Joey Paps" Pugliese Canada
  • Soldiers:
  • Ignazio "Harold" Bordonaro
  • Corrado "Cookie" Caruso
  • Paul "Paulie" Cipolla
  • Ralph Criminisi
  • Bruno "Bronzie" DePaolo b.1967
  • Joseph "Joey Dips" DePaolo
  • Michael "Mike" DePaolo
  • Daniel "Danny" Gasbarinni
  • Dominic "Dominick Dom" Italiano Acting
  • Vincent "Vinny" Lombardo
  • Frank "Frankie" Papalia b.1930
  • Rocco Papalia b.1935
  • Anthony "Tony" Pugliese

Past members

[edit]
  • Samples

[1]



[2]

Sample-------------- [3]


  1. ^ Cedilot, Andre; Andre Noel (2012). Mafia Inc: The Long, Bloody Reign of Canada's Sicilian Clan. Vintage Canada. pp. 278–284. ISBN 0307360415.
  2. ^ Schneider, Stephen (2018). Canadian Organized Crime. Canadian Scholars' Press Inc. p. 176. ISBN 9781773380247.
  3. ^ Rizzo, Michael F. (2012). Gangsters and Organized Crime in Buffalo: History, Hits and Headquarters. Arcadia Publishing. pp. 560. ISBN 9781614235491.

  • July 9, 1922: Joseph Peter DiCarlo, boss of the Buffalo Family, died of natural causes. He was succeeded by Stefano (Steve) Magaddino.
  • February 6, 1973: Richard J. Todaro, an influential member of the Magaddino Family, was indicted on charges of running an illegal gambling business. Todaro also was charged with destruction of property to avoid seizure when he set fire to his records during an FBI search of his residence in March, 1972.


Canada

[edit]
  • Charles Calogero Bordonaro of Hamilton listed as leader of Mafia sic at Hamilton
  • Domenic Belcastro, Thomas Rasso and Domenic Longo of Guelph members of international gang
  • Rocco Perri lieutenants: Frank Sylvestro "Frank Ross" a bootlegger; Antonio Papalia a bootlegger and father of John Papalia; and Calogero "Charlie" Bordonaro black hand bomber and Perri supporter.
  • From Niagara falls Vincenzo "James" Saccco, bootlegger and Perri associate; "Black Peter" Sacco an gambler and bootlegger; John "Archie/Czar" Saccone, alien smuggler; ..
  • From Guelph arsonist and counterfeiter Domenic Belcastro and Domenic Longo a bootlegger and Perri ally

https://books.google.com/books?id=Pi08FdhWKI8C&pg=PA137&dq=Santo+Scibetta&hl=en&sa=X&ei=bGDQUdneJtWj4APioYHICw&ved=0CDMQ6AEwAQ#v=onepage&q=Cipolla&f=false

  • pg. 108 The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher By Peter Edwards

  • pg. 252 The Encyclopedia of Canadian Organized Crime: From Captain Kidd to Mom Boucher By Peter Edwards

https://books.google.com/books?id=D4XaV2YB7U4C&pg=PA252&dq=Sylvestro+and+Frank+%22Chich&hl=en&newbks=1&newbks_redir=0&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjR1pfJptvmAhXrV98KHQAsCjwQ6AEwAHoECAMQAg#v=onepage&q=Sylvestro%20and%20Frank%20%22Chich&f=false

  • Antonio "Tony" Sylvestro and Frank "Chich" Sylvestro of Hamilton were Mafia members of southern Ontario in the 1940s and 1950s along with Matteo "Big Joe" Cipolla in Guelph and Nicholas Cicchini in Windsor. Frank Sylvestro who sometimes travelled under name "Frank Ross" was a bootlegger and a lieutenant of Rocco Perri.

Ignazio "Harold/Harry/Harold Vincent" Bordonaro and Jimmy Bordonaro

---



  • Daniel "Danny" Gasbarinni

Gasbarrini married the daughter of Tony Sylvestro, one of three Mafia dons who took over loansharking, gambling and narcotics across southern Ontario after Rocco Perri disappeared and his lieutenants were murdered

Musitano family

[edit]
  • The Musitano clan had long been under the protection of the powerful Rizzuto clan in Montreal.

https://torontosun.com/news/local-news/mob-war-theories-abound-on-musitano-powerplay


Rochester

[edit]

https://rocwiki.org/Rochester_Crime_Family


Alleged betting ring busted in October "had links to both the Gambino and Genovese crime families." In 2002, the elder Fafone, nicknamed "Boca Joe," was arrested with his son and a reputed Gambino family associate - Frank "The Bear" Basto - by a Florida police investigation dubbed "Operation Goodfellas."


Paul Borrelli



Jake Russo death


illegal gambling operation. Daniel Elliott, who sources said goes by "Miami Dan,

NJ Commission Reports

[edit]

The Windows Trail

[edit]

The Window Trail (May 31, 1990–October 10, 1991) was a criminal trial in New York City, USA. Using evidence obtained by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, fifteen organized crime figures, in four of the "Five Families" were indicted by United States Attorney General Dick Thornburgh under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) on conspiracy and tax fraud charges.

Background

[edit]

Indictment

[edit]

On May 31, 1990 fifteen men were indicted on conspiracy and tax fraud charges

Name Association Position Notes
Vincent "the Chin" Gigante Genovese crime family Boss
Venero "Benny Eggs" Mangano Underboss
Dominic "Baldy Dom" Canterino Caporegime
Joseph Zito Caporegime Released on $1 million bond
Vittorio "Vic" Amuso Lucchese crime family Boss Missing yesterday not arrested
Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso Underboss Missing yesterday not arrested
Peter "Fat Pete" Chiodo Caporegime Released on $1 million bond
John "Sonny Blue" Morrissey Associate Missing yesterday not arrested. Later revealed was murdered.
Joseph "Joe Cakes" Marion Associate Released on $1 million bond
Peter "One Eye" Gotti Gambino crime family Caporegime Released on $1 million bond
Caesar Gurino Associate
Benedetto "Benny" Aloi Colombo crime family Consigliere
Dennis DeLucia Soldier Released on $1 million bond
Vincent "Three Fingers" Ricciardo Associate
Thomas McGowan Business agent in Local 580 Released on $1 million bond

The four crime families monopolized the selection of contractors for the manufacture and installation of more than one million windows. The Mafia leaders determined who would bid for most contracts to replace or install windows for the New York City Housing Authority, the indictment said.(NYT Suspected....)



The trail began on May 8, 1991, Victor Amuso and Anthony Casso were fugitive's.

  • Five Families: The Rise, Decline, and Resurgence of America's Most Powerful ... By Selwyn Raab p. 498
  • The Brotherhoods: The True Story of Two Cops Who Murdered for the Mafia By Guy Lawson, William Oldham p. 127.
  • Gaspipe: Confessions of a Mafia Boss By Philip Carlo p. 224
  • Gotham Unbound: How New York City Was Liberated from the Grip of Organized Crime By James B. Jacobs, Coleen Friel, Robert Raddick p. 289
  1. Vittorio (Vic) Amuso boss of the Lucchese crime family; missing yesterday not arrested
  2. Anthony (Gaspipe) Casso underboss of the Lucchese family; missing yesterday not arrested
  3. Peter (Fat Pete) Chido capo in the Lucchese family; released on $1 million bond
  4. John (Sonny Blue) Morrissey associate in the Lucchese family; missing yesterday not arrested
  5. Joseph (Joe Cakes) Marion associate in the Lucchese family; released on $1 million bond
  6. Vincent (the Chin) Gigante boss of the Genovese crime family
  7. Venero (Benny Eggs) Mangano underboss of the Genovese family
  8. Dominic (Baldy Dom) Canterino capo in the Genovese family
  9. Joseph Zito capo in the Genovese family; released on $1 million bond
  10. Peter Gotti capo in Gambino family; released on $1 million bond
  11. Caesar Gurino associate of the Gambino family
  12. Benedetto (Benny) Aloi consiglieri in Colombo family
  13. Dennis DeLucia soldier in the Colombo family; released on $1 million bond
  14. Vincent (three fingers) Ricciardo associate of the Colombo family
  15. Thomas McGowan a business agent in Local 580; released on $1 million bond

From 1978 to 1990 four, of the Five New York City crime families (Lucchese, Genovese, Gambino and Colombo) formed a cartel that controlled the sale and installation of thousands of energy-efficient windows in New York City housing projects.

"Colombo family mobsters Benedetto Aloi and Dennis DeLucia along with Genovese family mobster Venero Mangano were found guilty. ... Peter Savino, a Genovese associate testified that the bid-rigging scheme began more than 10 years ago but that it ceased for awhile and that he revived it in his role as a Government informer in 1988. Local 580 received the payoffs and passed on a substantial share to the Lucchese crime family, the prosecutors charged. They said three other crime families -- Genovese, Colombo and Gambino -- controlled various window companies that provided profits and kickbacks. Two more mobsters who became informers, Philip Leonetti and Peter Chiodo, testified about their roles in the Mafia."
"Colombo family's Benedetto Aloi was given 16 years and 8 months; Genovese family's Venero Mangano received 15 years and 8 months and each man was also fined $100,000. Colombo family's Dennis DeLucia, was sentenced to 3 years and 10 months and fined $25,000." ......