Updated news on the Gambino, Genovese, Bonanno, Lucchese and Colombo Organized Crime Families of New York City.

Sunday, September 26, 2021

Leadership of the Colombo family met multiple times at famous restaurant to discuss future of the mob


Andrew "Mush" Russo, an alleged Colombo crime family boss, arrives at Brooklyn Federal Court in 2013. 
Andrew "Mush" Russo, an alleged Colombo crime family boss, arrives at Brooklyn Federal Court in 2013.  

The to-die-for hot roast beef sandwich wasn’t the only thing on the menu when the Colombo family hierarchy gathered at Brooklyn’s legendary Brennan and Carr restaurant.

The Daily News has learned the crime family’s top echelon assembled on two separate occasions to discuss mob business inside the 83-year-old eatery last November, much to the surprise of a somewhat amused management.

“That’s interesting,” said veteran Brennan and Carr manager Richie Egan, a smile on his face. “I never even knew.”

Federal investigators, on the other hand, were well aware of the sessions led by Colombo boss Andrew “Mush” Russo. Court documents indicate both meetings were under law enforcement surveillance as the 86-year-old Russo, underboss Benjamin Castellazo, consigliere Ralph DiMatteo and a pair of family capos discussed a change at the top of the family leadership and the ongoing shakedown of a local union.

Ralph DiMatteo
Ralph DiMatteo

Like a plate of pasta and a glass of red wine, the mob and New York’s restaurant business remain inextricably linked a full 90 years after Guiseppe “Joe the Boss” Masseria was gunned down inside Coney Island’s Nuova Villa Tammaro on April 15, 1931.

The scene after Guiseppe "Joe the Boss" Masseria was killed inside Coney Island’s Nuova Villa Tammaro in 1931.
The scene after Guiseppe "Joe the Boss" Masseria was killed inside Coney Island’s Nuova Villa Tammaro in 1931.

On July 12, 1979, Bonanno boss Carmine Galante ate his last meal on the patio of Joe & Mary’s Italian-American Restaurant in Brooklyn, with a final course of lethal lead. The dead don was famously photographed with his post-lunch cigar still clenched between his teeth.

The July 12, 1979 murder of Bonanno boss Carmine Galante at Joe & Mary’s Italian-American Restaurant in Brooklyn.
The July 12, 1979 murder of Bonanno boss Carmine Galante at Joe & Mary’s Italian-American Restaurant in Brooklyn.

And just before Christmas 1985, Gambino boss Big Paul Castellano and driver Tommy Billotti parked illegally outside Spark’s Steak House before heading inside for some prime rib with fellow mobsters.

Neither made it to the front door, gunned down by four shooters waiting on orders from new boss John Gotti.

Death is not the only pitfall in public dining. On occasion, the assembled Mafiosi were caught on bugs that no Health Department inspector would ever find.

Back in 2003, veteran Genovese capo John “Buster” Ardito wound up with agita after discovering recording devices tucked beneath tables at two of his favorite New Rochelle restaurants.

And 16 years prior, wiretaps inside the ladies’ room of a Hoboken restaurant captured Gambino family consigliere Bobby Manna discussing a plot to whack both Gambino boss Gotti and his brother Gene.

“We’re gonna be paying for this, you know, for the rest of our lives,” one of the plotters observed during the recorded discussion.

The body of Carmine Galante is taken out of Joe & Mary's Restaurant on Knickerbocker Ave. in Brooklyn in 1979.
The body of Carmine Galante is taken out of Joe & Mary's Restaurant on Knickerbocker Ave. in Brooklyn in 1979.

Former Bonanno boss “Big Joey” Massino, a man who liked a good meal, opened his own Queens restaurant: CasaBlanca, where a sign promised “Fine Italian Cuisine” to its patrons. The eatery became a meeting place for the mob, with Bonanno capos among the regulars at the Maspeth business.

Among the menu favorites: Ravioli with scallops and portabella mushrooms.

According to court documents, the Colombo leadership first assembled inside Brennan and Carr in mid-November before returning for a second sitdown on Nov. 19. Russo did not attend the latter meeting, although his designated Colombo family successor Theodore Persico Jr. showed up.

And once again, so did the feds.

The 58-year-old Skinny Teddy, identified as a family captain in court papers, is a nephew of the late Colombo family boss Carmine “Junior” Persico.

The Brennan and Carr restaurant on Nostrand Ave. in Brooklyn.
The Brennan and Carr restaurant on Nostrand Ave. in Brooklyn.

After Gotti’s ascension to the Gambino seat of power, the Dapper Don’s favorite restaurants received a boost from his patronage: The since-shuttered Da Noi on the Upper East Side and the late, lamented Taormino in Little Italy became instant hot spots. He was known for paying in cash, and leaving generous tips.

And the April 7, 1972, mob hit of Colombo family legend “Crazy Joey” Gallo inside Umberto’s Clam House on Mulberry St. lives on in pop culture, featured prominently in director Martin Scorsese’s 2019 film “The Irishman.”

Umbertos Clam House at 129 Mulberry St. where Joe Gallo was shot and killed. (New York Daily News Archive)
Umbertos Clam House at 129 Mulberry St. where Joe Gallo was shot and killed.

The Brooklyn-born Gallo, killed at age 43 to end a long night celebrating his last birthday, was memorialized by Bob Dylan in a 1976 song with an oblique reference to the site of Joey’s last meal (shrimp, scungilli and clams).

“One day they blew him down in a clam bar in New York,” sang Dylan. “He could see it comin’ through the door as he lifted up his fork ... Joey, Joey. What made them want to blow you away?”

https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/ny-nyc-mob-restaurants-20210925-elugcddudndjriau4z4b7vazli-story.html#nt=pf-double%20chain~top-version-2021~flex%20feature~curated~colombo-936a~ELUGCDDUDNDJRIAU4Z4B7VAZLI~1~1~5~7~art%20yes

Jailed Underboss of the Buffalo crime family gets a new chance at freedom


Violi, now 55, was caught in an unusual police probe that featured a 'made member' of a New York City Mafia organization, the Bonanno family, working as a police informant for both U.S. and Canadian police.

An imprisoned Canadian who claimed he was the second-in-command of a New York Mafia family has won a new chance for freedom — after arguing he was never convicted of being a mobster and so he shouldn’t be considered one by the parole board.

Domenico Violi’s family has been an important part of Mafia history in both Canada and Italy for generations.

His father was Montreal Mafia boss Paolo Violi, who was killed in 1978 by members of the rival Rizzuto clan; his mother is the daughter of former Hamilton, Ont., Mafia chief Giacomo Luppino; and his namesake grandfather led a Mafia clan back in Italy.

In 2017, police wiretaps caught Violi boasting of making some Mafia history of his own, according to documents filed in court.

Violi, now 55, was caught in an unusual police probe that featured a “made member” of a New York City Mafia organization, the Bonanno family, working as a police informant for both U.S. and Canadian police. Because the Mafia is a secret society, recording what alleged members privately said to each other offered a rare, insider’s view of the Mafia on both sides of the border, prosecutors said.

Paulo Violi – Vic Catroni’s right hand man was expected to take over the family, He was 46 when he was invited to a card game on Jan. 22, 1978, that turned out to be a set up.
Paulo Violi – Vic Catroni’s right hand man was expected to take over the family, He was 46 when he was invited to a card game on Jan. 22, 1978, that turned out to be a set up. 

When the American informant met with Violi in 2017, according to court documents, Violi told him he had been made “the underboss” of the Mafia organization based in Buffalo, N.Y. The underboss is the second-highest position in an American Mafia family.

If true, he would be the only person in Canada to ever be named to one of the top leadership positions in any U.S.-based Mafia clan.

“Domenic, you know you made history,” Violi said the alleged boss of the Buffalo Mafia told him when Violi was promoted to the position, according to a wiretap summary.

Violi was arrested at the end of the three-year probe.

At his trial in 2018, Violi struck a deal, pleading guilty to drug trafficking and possession of property obtained by crime while criminal organization charges against him were dropped. His guilty plea meant the veracity of the wiretaps were never tested in court.

He was sentenced to six years, four months and 21 days in prison.

The plea also meant Violi was never judicially deemed a mob member, let alone the underboss of a Mafia family, and that became important this month when Violi made his case for freedom.

His application for day parole and full parole had been denied in April by the Parole Board of Canada.

At that parole hearing, the board heard Violi’s application and numerous letters of support from members of the community of his positive contribution as a businessman and a philanthropist.

Just 35 minutes into that hearing, however, board members started directly asking him about his alleged ties to “traditional organized crime,” which is what Canadian police and justice officials call the Mafia.

The board was told of Violi’s behaviour in prison.

“You have maintained institutional employment, with excellent work reports, and participated in voluntary activities including learning new languages and playing guitar, as well as attending church services institutionally,” the April decision said. It also cautioned he had been involved in the purchase of money orders by a known associate of his, and sent to other inmates, “some of whom are known to be involved in the institutional drug subculture.”

Police told the board in April that Violi’s safety, as well as public safety, “could be at risk due to retaliatory violent occurrences in the community.”

As well, the board heard confidential information from police and prison officials. Prison officials recommended his parole be denied, partly due to his “ties to organized crime as a key player in an identified crime family.”

Violi denied being involved in organized crime.

Nonetheless, the parole board in April denied him release.

“It is the Board’s opinion that any involvement with organized crime will not result in the protection of society. Therefore, on balance the risk that you present to the community as a whole is not manageable on either a day or full parole release,” the April decision said.

Violi complained that the board relied on unproven police information.

He appealed the decision to the parole board’s appeal division, saying it was procedurally unfair to ask him questions about being involved in organized crime because he hasn’t been convicted of gangsterism.

“You argue that saying someone is involved in organized crime does not necessarily imply that a person has committed any particular offence and it certainly does not mean that they are an unmanageable risk of criminally offending if released,” the appeal decision summarized some of Violi’s complaint.

When police arrested Domenico Violi and searched his home, they found an autographed photo of the cast of The Sopranos, the popular Mafia television series.
When police arrested Domenico Violi and searched his home, they found an autographed photo of the cast of The Sopranos, the popular Mafia television series. 

In the appeal decision, written on Sept. 13 but only released Tuesday, Violi’s complaint was accepted. The appeal division said it was “problematic” for the board members at the April hearing to question him on being a mobster for two reasons.

The first was that while board members can consider information someone may be a gangster, it is improper to directly demand answers about it during a hearing, based on past court decisions. The second was that the board’s written reasons did not explain the concern over organized crime.

The board failed to reconcile the disconnect between Violi’s impressive support from the community and good behaviour with being too risky to release because of an expected return to organized crime.

The appeal division said Violi’s successful complaint did not mean there aren’t potential problems with his bid for release, but that his application would have to face a better analysis at a new hearing.

Until then, the board’s decision to keep him in prison remains.

https://nationalpost.com/news/canada/mafia-underboss-gets-new-chance-for-freedom-because-parole-board-asked-about-mafia

Friday, September 24, 2021

Last known mobster FBI believes had knowledge of famous Boston art heist has died


 

Robert Gentile, the last person believed to have treasures from the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum heist of 1990, has died.

Gentile’s attorney Ryan McGuigan told Boston.com Gentile died Friday of a stroke at Hartford Hospital. The FBI considers Gentile the last person known to have possessed items from the heist, but Gentile denied this until his death, McGuigan said.

On St. Patrick’s Day in 1990, burglars stole more than half a billion dollars worth of art. In that theft, two men showed up at the museum in the overnight hours dressed as police officers. They restrained the security guards and left soon after with 13 pieces from the collection, including works from Rembrandt, Vermeer, and Degas. The art has never been found.

In 2013, the FBI announced that the art had traveled from Boston to Connecticut to Philadelphia, while some ended up in Maine. A woman from Maine reportedly told the FBI her husband had handed two paintings to Gentile in 2003, according to WTNH.

Gentile, who had an extensive criminal record and served time in prison, was believed to have connections with those suspected of getting the art after it had been stolen, but he denied ever having any of the works.

“I had nothing to do with the paintings. It’s a big joke,” Gentile said in a phone interview with The Associated Press in 2019 after being released from prison.

Authorities didn’t think so. They said the widow of another mobster said her husband gave Gentile two of the paintings, and that Gentile talked about the stolen work while in prison.

In a search of his home that led to his 2013 conviction for illegally selling prescription drugs and possessing guns, silencers, and ammunition, prosecutors said federal agents found a handwritten list of the stolen paintings and their estimated worth, along with a newspaper article about the museum heist a day after it happened.

There is currently a $10 million reward for information that leads directly to the repossession of the stolen art. 

https://www.boston.com/news/local-news/2021/09/22/robert-gentile-dead-at-85-gardner-museum-heist/

Saturday, September 18, 2021

Son of Mob Wives star is accused of unemployment fraud


Anthony Pagan

Staten Islander Anthony Pagan, the son of “Mob Wives” star Renee Graziano, stands accused of unemployment fraud.

Pagan, 27, illegally received more than $3,000 in unemployment payments from February through April of 2018 while he was working for a construction company, according to the criminal complaint.

The arrest stems from an investigation by the Economic Crimes Bureau of the District Attorney’s Office.

A review of business records of the New York State Department of Labor was part of the probe.

The complaint alleges that while Pagan “was employed and earning income from his employer, Tishman Construction Corp., the defendant certified to the New York State Department of Labor” the he was “totally unemployed and as a result received unemployment benefits issued by the New York State Department of Labor that defendant was not entitled to.”

Pagan is accused in the complaint of “utilizing the computer systems of the New York State Department of Labor to create false entries... in that defendant did fraudulently assert that defendant was totally unemployed and entitled to said benefits, when in fact the defendant was employed.”

The funds were directly deposited into a KeyBank benefits account accessed with a debit card mailed to the home address that Pagan listed on the application for unemployment benefits, the complaint states.

The complaint alleges that Pagan “did not have permission or authority to take, remove or possess said currency due to his employment status.”

Pagan has been charged with grand larceny, criminal possession of stolen property and falsifying business records.

He was issued a desk appearance ticket on Monday and released on his own recognizance.

He is due to appear in Criminal Court on Nov. 23, according to public records.

“I am vigorously defending Anthony’s case,” said Dawn Florio, his defense attorney. “It is a pending case so I will not be commenting further.”

Graziano became famous for her appearances on VH1′s “Mob Wives,” which was created by her sister, executive producer Jennifer Graziano.

The show was canceled in 2015 after six seasons.

https://www.silive.com/crime-safety/2021/08/son-of-mob-wives-star-accused-of-unemployment-fraud.html

Fugitive Colombo family Consigliere turns himself in to the FBI in NYC


 

Fugitive Colombo crime family consigliere turned himself in to the FBI in New York City Friday morning after his son posted - and later deleted - a picture of him sitting poolside in Florida, law enforcement sources told DailyMail.com. 

Ralph DiMatteo, 66, walked into the Brooklyn federal courthouse with his lawyer to surrender and was arraigned via teleconference on racketeering charges Thursday afternoon. 

He pleaded not guilty to all charges and will be held in jail until his next court appearance, which is scheduled for October 21.  

The alleged mobster was the only one to avoid arrest in Tuesday's sweeping federal raid targeting the leadership of the Colombo crime family. 

The alleged consigliere, or advisor to the crime boss, made national headlines after his son Angelo posted a picture of his dad - shirtless and waist-deep in a Florida pool - to his Twitter account on Wednesday and removed it by Thursday morning. 

DiMatteo's wife is pictured behind him, with her head at the edge of the pool as she relaxes and enjoys its waters.

He also tweeted a picture of a rat, suggesting the family is unhappy about snitches getting them in trouble, on Tuesday. That too has been removed. 

The indictment accuses the crime family of running a scheme involving labor union shakedowns, extortion, loansharking, drug trafficking and money laundering.

DiMatteo is accused of colluding with fellow defendants to devise a scheme to launder money from union healthcare contracts and payments.

DiMatteo is said to have done this through various channels linked to Joseph Bellantoni, who was named as a co-conspirator in the indictment, and eventually to the Colombo crime family's leaders, according to the federal indictment.

He was also accused of threatening bodily harm to control the management of the labor union that they were targeting and influencing decisions that benefitted the family. 

Reputed Colombo street boss Andrew "Andy Mush" Russo, 87, and his underboss, Benjamin "The Claw" Castellazzo, 83, were also scooped up by federal agents and New York police, along with seven other members of the Colombo crime family.

Among those charged was 75-year-old capo (captain) Vincent "Vinny Unions'"Ricciardo, who was recorded during a phone call in June threatening to kill a labor union official if he didn't play ball, according to the 19-count indictment.

The other captains, or capos, arrested include Richard Ferrara, 59, and Theodore "Skinny Teddy" Persico Jr., 58, who is the nephew of the late Colombo boss Carmine 'The Snake' Persico.

Colombo soldier Michael Uvino, 56, and associates Thomas Costa, 52, and Domenick Ricciardo, 56 - Vincent's cousin - were also booked.

'Everything we allege in this investigation proves history does indeed repeat itself,' FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Driscoll said concerning the indictment. 'The underbelly of the crime families in New York City is alive and well.'

'These soldiers, consiglieres, underbosses, and bosses are obviously not students of history, and don't seem to comprehend that we're going to catch them. Regardless of how many times they fill the void we create in their ranks, our FBI Organized Crime Task Force, and our law enforcement partners, are positioned to take them out again, and again.'

According to the indictment, the defendants and their co-conspirators committed and are charged with a wide array of crimes – including extortion, loansharking, fraud and drug trafficking – on behalf of the Colombo organized crime family.

In 2019, the family sought to divert more than $10,000 per month from the union's healthcare system directly to the administration of the Colombo crime family.

The Colombo family is one of five major mafia organizations in the northeastern United States. The others are the Genovese, Lucchese, Gambino and Bonanno families.

The latest indictments leave it unclear who remains to take control of the Colombo syndicate on the street.

The entire administration of the Colombo crime family, including Russo and Castellazzo, already pleaded guilty to a variety of mobster activities in 2012.

The New York mafia has been weakened by several blows in recent years, including arrests, fratricidal struggles and competition from other criminal organizations, but they are still considered active.

The reputed boss of the Gambino clan, Frank Cali, was shot and killed outside his home in the New York borough of Staten Island in March 2019.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-10002561/Fugitive-Colombo-consigliere-surrenders-FBI.html

Thursday, September 16, 2021

Fugitive Colombo Consigliere is on the run from the feds in Florida


 https://www.nydailynews.com/resizer/6dv8EfH0BfVDzKSGnWcNmEFgrF8=/800x668/top/cloudfront-us-east-1.images.arcpublishing.com/tronc/LD2M2IULBZFBTNPXY6CEAPMJYI.jpg

The newly-indicted consigliere of the Colombo family is getting along just swimmingly.

Fugitive mobster Ralph DiMatteo was on the run from the feds on Wednesday — and his son posted a taunting Twitter picture of his shirtless wiseguy dad waist-deep in a pool.

DiMatteo, 66, was the only member of the Colombos indicted Tuesday to evade arrest after he traveled to Florida the day before. On Tuesday, his arrest was expected imminently — but by Wednesday, he was in the wind, the feds said.

“We consider him now to be a fugitive,” said John Marzulli, a spokesman for the U.S. Attorney’s Office in Brooklyn.

DiMatteo’s son, Angelo DiMatteo, updated his Twitter profile picture Wednesday to a photo of his barrel-chested father leaning back in a swimming pool with his wife lying behind him.

It’s not clear if the shot was taken before or after the indictment was filed.

Angelo also posted a rat emoji to his Twitter account on Tuesday, suggesting someone in the Colombo family gabbed to the feds.

DiMatteo senior’s attorney, Mathew Mari, was in contact with the feds about a possible surrender Tuesday, but talks fell apart, a source familiar with the matter told the Daily News.

Federal investigators captured DiMatteo speaking on government recordings about mob family business, including one where he offered a menacing job description.

“That’s what I do for a living, I get people like you and I scare them,” he explained in a recorded phone call.

DiMatteo, known as “number three” by other members of the Colombo clan in deference to his rank in the family hierarchy, was hit along with 87-year-old boss Andrew Russo on charges of racketeering, including acts of extortion and money laundering.

He was also charged with conspiracy to steal and embezzle health benefit funds, attempted health care fraud and other charges as the feds took down the family’s entire hierarchy.

His co-defendants include underboss Benjamin "The Claw" Castellazzo and four capos — including the nephew of the crime family namesake Carmine "Junior" Persico.

Feds said the wiretaps illustrated his control over lower-ranking crime family members, with DiMatteo heard summoning his underlings immediately to meetings at Russo’s home or to report to “Brooklyn” — a reference to meet at a garage in Gravesend.

DiMatteo’s rap sheet includes a 1985 conviction for conspiracy to distribute heroin and drug trafficking offenses that got him a eight-year prison sentence. In 2001, he was convicted of conspiracy to commit money laundering, which got him an 18 month sentence.

https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny-colombo-family-consigliere-ralph-dimatteo-fugitive-florida-20210915-3kfxbug6cvauhm73hgy5iexvk4-story.html

Tuesday, September 14, 2021

Feds take down entire Colombo family administration in sweeping indictment



A sweeping federal indictment has charged the entire leadership structure of the Colombo crime family in a scheme involving labor union shakedowns, extortion, loansharking, drug trafficking and money laundering.   

Reputed Colombo street boss Andrew "Mush" Russo, 87, and his underboss, Benjamin Castellazzo, 83, were scooped up by federal agents and New York police, along with seven other members of the Colombo crime family, a U.S. attorney spokesperson said on Tuesday. 

Russo's consigliere, Ralph DiMatteo, 66, was also charged in the indictment but remains on the run, prosecutors said. 

Among those charged was 75-year-old capo Vincent "Vinny Unions" Ricciardo, who was recorded during a phone call in June threatening to kill a labor union official if he didn't play ball, according to the 19-count indictment. 

'I'll put him in the ground right in front of his wife and kids, right in front of his f***ing house,' Ricciardo says in the disturbing recording described in the indictment.

'I'm not afraid to go to jail, let me tell you something, to prove a point? I would f***ing shoot him right in front of his wife and kids, call the police, f*** it, let me go, how long you think I'm gonna last anyway?' 

The other captains, or capos, arrested include Theodore Persico Jr., 58, - the nephew of the late Colombo boss Carmine Persico - and Richard Ferrara, 59. 

Colombo soldier Michael Uvino, 56, and associates Thomas Costa, 52, and Domenick Ricciardo, 56 - Vincent's cousin - were also booked.

The indictment against the crime family members lays out multiple schemes in a long-running campaign to infiltrate and take control of a Queens-based labor union and its affiliated health care benefit program, and to a conspiracy to commit fraud in connection with workplace safety certifications. 

Russo, Castellazzo, DiMatteo, Ferrara, Persico, Uvino, and Vincent and Domenick Ricciardo colluded with fellow defendants Erin Thompkins, 53, and Joseph Bellantoni, 39, among others, to devise a scheme to launder money from union healthcare contracts and payments through various channels linked to Bellantoni, and eventually to the Colombo crime family's leaders, according to the indictment.

'Today's charges describe a long-standing, ruthless pattern by the administration of the Colombo crime family, its captains, members and associates, of conspiring to exert control over the management of a labor union by threatening to inflict bodily harm on one of its senior officials and devising a scheme to divert and launder vendor contract funds from its health care benefit program,' Acting U.S. Attorney Jacquelyn M. Kasulis said of the high-profile arrests.

'In addition, for their own enrichment, the defendants conspired to engage in extortionate loansharking, money laundering and fraud, as well as drug trafficking.'

'This Office and its law enforcement partners are committed to dismantling organized crime families, eliminating their corrupt influence in our communities and protecting the independence of labor unions.' 

The feds also arrested a soldier for the Bonanno family, 59-year-old John "Maniac" Ragano, who is charged with loansharking, fraud and drug-trafficking offenses. 

Ragano is accused of leading a scheme to issue fraudulent workplace safety training certifications to construction workers, according to the indictment.

Rather than provide candidates the proper training, Ragano and fellow defendant and business partner, John Glover, 62, allegedly falsified federal paperwork, indicating hundreds of workers completed mandatory safety courses that they did not actually complete - or even attend.

Instead, various defendants used Ragano's pseudo-schools to conduct meetings involving Sicilian mafia members and to store stashes of illegal drugs.

Meanwhile they generated cash using the schools in Franklin Square and Ozone Park as 'certificate mills', charging $500 a pop for construction safety training certificates without providing any training or testing, according to the indictment. 

The final defendant, Vincent Martino, 43, was charged along with Vincent Ricciardo, Ragano, Costa, and Glover with conspiracy to distribute marijuana by transporting large shipments of the drug across state lines in vehicles from New York to Florida. 

'Everything we allege in this investigation proves history does indeed repeat itself,' FBI Assistant Director-in-Charge Driscoll said concerning the indictment. 'The underbelly of the crime families in New York City is alive and well.' 

'These soldiers, consiglieres, underbosses, and bosses are obviously not students of history, and don't seem to comprehend that we're going to catch them. Regardless of how many times they fill the void we create in their ranks, our FBI Organized Crime Task Force, and our law enforcement partners, are positioned to take them out again, and again.' 

According to the indictment, the defendants and their co-conspirators committed and are charged with a wide array of crimes – including extortion, loansharking, fraud and drug trafficking – on behalf of the Colombo organized crime family.

The document asserts that Russo, Castellazzo, and DiMatteo, as well captains Persico, Ferrara and Vincent Ricciardo, initiated direct threats of bodily harm, to control the management of the labor union that they were targeting, and influenced decisions that benefitted the family. 

According to the U.S. attorney's office, Colombo captain Ricciardo and his cousin, associate Domenick Ricciardo, collected a portion of the salary of a senior union official for roughly 20 years, threatening the high-ranking official and his family with violence - and even murder - if he did not comply with the family's demands.

In 2019, the family sought to divert more than $10,000 per month from the union's healthcare system directly to the administration of the Colombo crime family. 

The suspects were taken to federal court in Brooklyn Tuesday afternoon and will appear before a judge via videoconference to face the slew of charges against them.   

Unlike the others, Vincent Ricciardo was arrested in North Carolina and will be arraigned in Charlotte, also Tuesday afternoon. 

Russo, known as 'Mush,' is a cousin of Carmine Persico, and first rose to prominence in the family when he was promoted to acting underboss in 1973. Carmine Persico, nicknamed the Snake, died in 2019.

Russo was sentenced to 14 years in state prison in November 1986, until his release in July 1994, under special parole conditions. 

He first ruled as street boss from 1996 to 1999, bringing the then-warring Colombos back from the brink after a devastating civil war, but was arrested again in 1996 by the FBI, who slapped him with racketeering charges, claiming he illegally controlled and oversaw Long Island's garbage hauling industry. 

In August 1999, Russo was convicted of jury tampering and sentenced to 57 months in prison, compounded by 123 months for both parole violation and his involvement in the racketeering case. 

After his release in 2010 at 76 years old, Russo again took over the family as street boss after his parole expired, succeeding the incarcerated Ralph DeLeo, while Persico's son, Alphonse "Allie Boy" Persico, served as acting boss. 

In 2011, he was arrested again on racketeering charges, garnering a 33 month sentence. He resumed his role as street boss on his release in 2013. 

The Colombo family is one of five major mafia organizations in the northeastern United States. The others are the Genovese, Lucchese, Gambino and Bonanno families.

The latest indictments leave it unclear who remains to take control of the Colombo syndicate on the street. 

The entire administration of the Colombo crime family, including Russo and Castellazzo, already pleaded guilty to a variety of mobster activities in 2012. 

The New York mafia has been weakened by several blows in recent years, including arrests, fratricidal struggles and competition from other criminal organizations, but they are still considered active.

The reputed boss of the Gambino clan, Frank Cali, was shot and killed outside his home in the New York borough of Staten Island in March 2019.

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-9990007/Colombo-crime-boss-arrested-feds-one-famed-five-families-fraud-corruption-raid.html

Wednesday, September 8, 2021

Tuesday, September 7, 2021

Friday, September 3, 2021

Wednesday, September 1, 2021