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

Showing posts with label Anthony Antico. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Anthony Antico. Show all posts

Sunday, October 6, 2013

Genovese mob rat gets break on prison sentencing



A mob rat sulking over the nine-year sentence he received for his role in the murder of a Staten Island jeweler got some time shaved off his term.

Former Genovese associate Christopher Prince, 30, was seeking his release from prison after serving five years for acting as the lookout in the fatal robbery of Louis Antonelli in 2008. Instead, he got a year knocked off the 45 months remaining on his sentence.

Federal prosecutors were in Prince’s corner, arguing that he had testified against Genovese capo Anthony Antico, who was acquitted of ordering the robbery. Prince was also prepared to testify against Colombo mob bigshot Michael Persico before he pleaded guilty to a deal of the century offered by the government.

Meanwhile, Prince was slapped with more jail time than more murderous mob rats like Bonanno heavyweights Salvatore Vitale, who has 11 murders on his résumé, and Richard Canterella, with three.

U.S. District Judge Carol Amon said she was not persuaded that Prince had earned a get-out-of-jail card.

“To what extent is any of this new or wasn’t known at the original sentencing?” Amon asked in Brooklyn federal court.

The judge noted Prince had faced 30 years in prison, so the term he received was a significant reward for his cooperation.

Prince will likely be released into the witness protection program.

“I don’t think ‘time served’ would be appropriate in light of the very serious criminal conduct he was involved in before he cooperated,” Amon said.

Prince shrugged in the direction of family members, indicating the reduction was better than nothing.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/mob-rat-break-role-staten-island-jeweler-murder-article-1.1473453

Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Turncoat mobster says government should spring Big Joey from prison for his cooperation



Joseph Massino, ex-Bonanno crime boss, is seeking reduction in his life sentence.

Rats have to watch out for each other.

Joseph Massino, the first American Mafia boss to sing to the feds, has found an ally in his bid to get sprung from prison before he dies — another mob rat.

“I hate to play judge, but I think he should get time served,” said Alphonse "Little Al" D’Arco, the former acting boss of the Lucchese crime family — and the second-highest-ranking defecting gangster after Massino.

“The government took his cooperation, he did what they asked,” D’Arco, 80, said in a statement provided to the Daily News. “They owe him. You can’t let him rot in prison for the rest of his life.”

Massino, 70, the once-feared boss of the Bonanno crime family, was convicted of racketeering and eight murders and sentenced to life in prison in 2005.

He’ll get a chance at early release Wednesday, when Brooklyn Federal Judge Nicholas Garaufis resentences him. That hearing came about because prosecutors promised Massino they would write a letter to the judge seeking a reduction in his sentence as a reward for providing info that resulted in numerous indictments.

The wily wiseguy made no secret why he joined with the feds, once testifying, “I’m hoping someday I see light at the end of the tunnel.”

But he may soon see light emanating from a different source than the sun.

“He’s on his way out of the picture,” said a source briefed on Massino’s deteriorating health.

Alphonse "Little Al" D'Arco had eight murders on his résumé, testified in more than a dozen trials.

D’Arco, who also had eight murders on his résumé, testified in more than a dozen trials, including against the lethal “Mafia Cops” Louis Eppolito and Steven Caracappa, who killed for Lucchese underboss Anthony "Gaspipe" Casso.

Massino appeared on the witness stand only twice, testifying against his successor, Vincent "Vinny Gorgeous" Basciano and Genovese capo Anthony Antico. No matter, D’Arco points out, the consequences of cooperating are the same.

“The mob don’t forget,” he said. “There are still some capable guys out there who might want to go out there and whack the guy (Massino).”

D’Arco, soon to be immortalized in the upcoming book, “Mob Boss, the Life of Little Al D’Arco, the Man Who Brought Down the Mafia,” by Jerry Capeci and Tom Robbins, said he is still looking over his shoulder a decade after a judge gave him time-served as a reward.“Maybe they’ll get me yet,” D’Arco, who had eight murders on his resume, told the authors of the forthcoming tome from St. Martin’s Press.

Massino has served 101/2 years since he was arrested at Queens, faux mansionhome. He subsequently handed over his fortune: $7.6 million in cash, 257 gold bars stashed in his attic and the CasaBlanca restaurant he controlled.

His wife and elderly mother were allowed to keep their houses.

Massino’s brother-in-law Salvatore Vitale, who flipped soon after he was arrested and testified against Massino, ended up with the sweetest deal of all — the former underboss served only seven years despite participating in 11 murders.

Massino and D’Arco wreaked havoc on their crime families, but law enforcement sources said the Bonanno and Lucchese clans are showing signs of rising from the ashes.

The families have been inducting new soldiers to beef up their decimated ranks over the past 18 months, sources said.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/crime/alphonse-al-arco-fellow-crime-boss-joseph-massino-article-1.1393354#ixzz2YYRi2gvg

Sunday, February 24, 2013

Staten Island Deli king caught in check fraud scheme


Saquib Khan,the deli king of Staten Island, was in trouble.

Hurricane Sandy had devastated his businesses,leaving him unable to pay his bills. His mob ties had been exposed in federal court. His financial maneuvering had just come under scrutiny by auditors.

Mr. Khan saw one way out,federal prosecutors said: He wrote hundreds of checks to himself,then raced across the city from bank to bank to deposit them in accounts under his name or those of his businesses.

In all,the prosecutors said,the checks totaled $82 million.

It was one of the largest check-fraud schemes anywhere in the country in recent years,according to the complaint against Mr. Khan and interviews with fraud experts - a brazen example of a crime that has been on the rise since the recession hit.

This is an era in which thieves steal millions with the click of a mouse. But Mr. Khan is accused of carrying out a low-tech fraud that has unexpectedly exposed holes in the security of the banking system. He took advantage of the willingness of banks to allow some customers to overdraw their accounts temporarily,prosecutors said.

The criminal complaint also sheds light on Mr. Khan,one of those extraordinary characters nurtured by the city,an immigrant whose life of operatic twists has wound through tribal Pakistan,Staten Island strip malls,fund-raisers for Hillary Rodham Clinton and underground gambling halls.

The banks have recovered most of the $82 million,officials said. More than $11 million of the money that Mr. Khan withdrew is now frozen in an account to be distributed to the banks to help repay their losses,his lawyer said.

It appears he spent at least $2 million of the money before he was arrested on Dec. 13, according to interviews and the criminal complaint,which was brought by the United States attorney's office in Brooklyn.

Mr. Khan,who declined to be interviewed, is free on $500,000 bail and trying to arrange a plea bargain with prosecutors, according to court records. His lawyer said that Mr. Khan was only trying to save his business,and that he was working hard to pay back the banks.

But even experts were taken aback by the accusations.

"It blows my mind," said Frank Abagnale, the celebrated con man who inspired the Steven Spielberg movie "Catch Me if You Can" and now works as a fraud-detection consultant.

"That's way,way out there," Mr. Abagnale said.

Mr. Khan,51,comes from a prominent family in Pakistan - relatives said he was a favorite nephew of Bashir Ahmad Bilour,a well-known politician who spoke out against the Taliban. Mr. Bilour was killed in a suicide attack in late December.

Trained as a doctor,Mr. Khan came to the United States in the 1980s,but ended up working with his sister and her husband, who owned some two dozen delis across Staten Island.

From there,Mr. Khan set out on his own, building up Richmond Wholesale Company, a cigarette and grocery business that recorded $125 million in sales last year, according to Dun & Bradstreet,a financial information provider. Richmond Wholesale supplies products to delis and gas stations across the New York region. Mr. Khan also owns three delis.

Mr. Khan,until recently the chairman of the board of a prominent Staten Island mosque, was known in the borough's close-knit Pakistani community as a flashy businessman. He once had a mansion in the Todt Hill neighborhood and drove a Mercedes with a license plate that read "SKHAN."

He was also a generous supporter of politicians of both major parties,giving more than $65,000 to more than 40 campaigns in the last decade,including those of Mrs. Clinton,former Representative Anthony D. Weiner,former Gov. Eliot Spitzer and former Gov. George E. Pataki.

His friends said that while he reveled in his achievements,he was also a hardworking entrepreneur who built a life for himself deli by deli.

"I'd rather be working in my store," he said in 2010. "I'd rather be doing my daily business."

That comment,though,hinted at the dark side of his success. He made it while testifying at a mob trial.

As he rose in the business community on Staten Island,he developed a close relationship with a soldier in the Genovese crime family,John Giglio,also known as Johnny Bull or Fat John,according to the court testimony.

Mr. Khan testified that he had used that connection to pressure at least one reluctant deli owner to sell his business to him.

Through Mr. Giglio,Mr. Khan said he met other high-ranking organized crime figures in gambling halls,though he was never charged in connection with these relationships. (Mr. Khan's testimony came at the trial of Anthony Antico,who was convicted of racketeering.)

Prosecutors who put together the recent criminal complaint against Mr. Khan said his fraud was an outsized version of a familiar swindle - check kiting - in which the thief takes advantage of the time it takes for banks to clear checks.

The thief deposits inflated checks and then quickly transfers the money to another account before the checks bounce.

Hurricane Sandy hit Staten Island particularly hard,leaving Mr. Khan desperate to recoup business lost during power failures and worse,his lawyer, Sharon L. McCarthy,said.

"All he was trying to do was run his business and pay his employees," Ms. McCarthy said. "He did not intend to hurt any of these financial institutions."

The transfers and withdrawals are complicated,but suggested a simple plan: he deposited worthless checks and withdrew real money - tens of millions worth,according to the criminal complaint.

Over two weeks in November,he wrote hundreds of checks to himself,more than a dozen a day,drawing from accounts at about six banks,the complaint said.

The pattern of precise amounts - $886,841, then $874,532,then $461,232 - was an indication of fraud,experts said.

The pace grew increasingly frantic. He deposited $49 million worth of checks into accounts at Capital One,a mix of legitimate ones from vendors and fraudulent ones written to himself,according to court records and interviews.

The bank made those funds available without waiting for the checks to clear. That turned his fictions into millions,allowing Mr. Khan to transfer $42 million into accounts at other banks,according to a lawsuit that Capital One filed against Mr. Khan's company.

He then withdrew and transferred more money to other accounts as the fake checks kept piling up. He wrote checks worth $82 million that did not "appear to have had any legitimate purpose other than to support the 'check kiting' scheme," the criminal complaint said.

Ms. McCarthy called the $82 million figure "an artificial number" that represented the amount of overdrafts,but not the banks' total loss.

Soon,auditors at some of the banks -including Capital One,M & T Bank and Flushing Savings Bank - realized what was going on.

Ms. McCarthy said Mr. Khan blew the whistle on himself,alerting the banks that he had withdrawn far more than was in his accounts and planned to pay it back.

The banks declined to comment,and several civil lawsuits against Mr. Khan are pending.

His friends on Staten Island said they were shocked by the accusations,and described him as a humble man who was always on the job.

"If you had called him when he was doing cigarette wholesale,he would arrive there at 5 a.m. and be there until 8 p.m.," one of them,Suhail Muzaffar,said.

Mr. Khan's arrest has also caused turmoil at the mosque where he was chairman, Muslim Majlis of Staten Island. He resigned late last month.

He was once well respected there. Now, mosque leaders are sharply divided in their feelings toward him. A founder of the mosque recently resigned from its board after 33 years because of the taint of the Khan case.

For now,Mr. Khan is working to stave off the charges and pay back the banks any way he can,including selling his business -the final twist in the deli king's fall.

http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/22/nyregion/for-saquib-khan-efforts-to-save-staten-island-businesses-led-to-charges-of-fraud.html?pagewanted=all&_r=1&

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Mob Rat Salvatore "Sally FIsh" Maniscalco Gets 9 Years In Robbery Slaying Of Jeweler



Mob rat Salvatore (Sally Fish) Maniscalco swam clear of a life sentence Monday for his role in the robbery and slaying of a Staten Island jeweler.
But federal Judge Carol Amon didn't let him completely off the hook, giving him nine years for the botched crime that left jeweler Louis Antonelli dead.
"I will live with this every day of my life, as I should," said Maniscalco, who worked in his family's wholesale fish business.
"My parents gave me all the opportunities of the world, and I dishonored them."
Maniscalco, 36, looked disappointed after learning that he wasn't getting a free pass in return for testifying at the trials of co-defendants Anthony Pica and Genovese capo Anthony Antico, who were both convicted.
Although prosecutors said Antico ordered the robbery, he was convicted only of racketeering. Maniscalco's lawyer declined to comment.


http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/11/30/2010-11-30_mob_snitch_gets_9_yrs_in_robslay.html#ixzz16naWCpvV

Saturday, November 20, 2010

Bonanno Rat Who Hacked Victims Bodies With Saws Gets Time Served For Cooperating With Feds



A mob rat gave his family the thumbs-up sign Friday when he was granted freedom after admitting he dismembered a gangland corpse with saws and burned it in a furnace.
Stefan Cicale, 36, has already spent 54 months in prison and was sentenced to time served as a reward for cooperating with the feds.
The former Bonanno crime family associate will be let go as soon as the U.S. Marshals Service arranges a spot for him in the witness protection program.
Cicale pleaded guilty to racketeering charges, including the grisly disposal of murder victim Robert McKelvey inside the supposedly haunted Kreischer Mansion on Staten Island in 2005.
"I want to apologize to the McKelvey family. There is no excuse for what I did, and I will have to live with this the rest of my life," Cicale told Brooklyn Federal Judge Allyne Ross.
"I'd also like to thank the agents and prosecutors for the opportunity to repent my actions," he said.
Defense lawyer Evan Lipton claimed Cicale has changed his ways - and if the wanna-be wiseguy's ghastly testimony in two mob trials is accurate, hopefully that's true.
He testified he was in a strip joint when he was summoned to the creepy mansion by a Bonanno soldier to deal with the body of McKelvey, a mob associate.
Cicale and a couple of other crew members went to a Home Depot and bought power saws, dust masks and latex gloves for the bloody job.
They wrapped the body in garbage bags to protect themselves from spatter and went to work butchering McKelvey.
"Two of us would hold the body, and one person would cut the body," Cicale testified, describing how they took turns with the saw.
The body parts were fed into the mansion furnace, and Cicale later purchased goodies for the crew at Dunkin' Donuts before they cleaned up the blood and gore.
Assistant U.S. Attorney Jack Dennehy said the defendant had provided substantial help in the convictions of those responsible for McKelvey's killing and recently had testified against Genovese capo Anthony Antico convicted of racketeering.

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/the_mob/2010/11/20/2010-11-20_theres_no_excuse_for_hacking_bodies.html#ixzz15qUuWsCr

Saturday, November 13, 2010

Long Time Gambino Family Associate Sentenced To 20 Years For Racketeering Conspiracy


Don Carlo Gambino
Image via Wikipedia
A Gambino crime family associate -- already serving 12-plus years for racketeering -- was slapped yesterday with another 20 by a judge who said he needed to be locked up until he's old and gray.
Edmund Boyle, 46, sat stone-faced as Manhattan federal Judge Colleen McMahon blasted him as a "heinous and unrepentant career criminal."
"I believe if he is released anytime soon, he is committed to returning to his life of crime," she said.
McMahon noted that Boyle would have become a member of the Mafia but for its "blatant ethnic discrimination," noting pointedly that "no Irish need apply."
Boyle was convicted in January for a racketeering conspiracy that included the 1998 murder of mob rat Frank Hydell, although a jury acquitted him of actually committing the killing outside a Staten Island strip club.
Meanwhile, in Brooklyn federal court, a Genovese crime-family captain was sentenced to nine years on gambling and extortion charges.
Anthony "Tico" Antico, 75, was convicted of racketeering for running an illegal gambling parlor in Staten Island and conspiring to rob the $1 million winner of a horse-racing bet in 2008.
But he begged for a chance at a new life, with a sentence of under three years.
"I just want a chance, your honor," Antico told Judge Carol B. Amon before he was sentenced. "You'll never see me again."

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/manhattan/another_years_for_gambino_wiseguy_mal4JgZ6xNbE9YHtxOtRWN#ixzz15HK8GUAl

Thursday, November 11, 2010

Longtime Genovese Family Captain Sentenced To 9 Years For Illegal Gambling Club



Longtime Genovese mobster Anthony Antico was sentenced Wednesday to nine years for racketeering and running an illegal gambling club on Staten Island while he was in prison.
The sentence was particulary heavy considering that Antico, 74, was acquitted by a Brooklyn jury of the most serious charge of ordering the fatal robbery of mobbed-up jeweler Louis Antonelli in 2008.
But Federal Judge Carol Amon ruled that the testimony of snitch Salvatore (Sally Fish) Maniscalco tying Antico to the heist was credible and should be factored in the sentence.

 http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2010/11/11/2010-11-11_capo_gets_9_yrs_for_illicit_gambling_club.html#ixzz14zt1UBgv

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Third Defendant Sentenced In Jeweler's Slaying


Flag of Staten IslandImage via WikipediaCharles Santiago has been sentenced to 15 years after pleading guilty for his role in the 2008 slaying of Staten Island jeweler Louis Antonelli during a botched robbery as reported by Frank Donnelly for The Staten Island Advance.  Prosecutors allege that the robbery plot against Antonelli was hatched by a Genovese crew because the jeweler failed to make tribute payments on the sale of his wares at a Brooklyn social club.  Two others -- Anthony Pica and John "Wizzie" DeLutro -- already have been sentenced for their involvement in the robbery fiasco, and Christopher Prince will be sentenced later today.  Joseph Gencarelli, a former city worker, and Salvatore "Sally Fish" Maniscalco remain to be sentenced.  Last July a federal jury acquitted reputed Genovese capo Anthony "Big Nose" Antico of ordering the Antonelli robbery.
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Friday, August 20, 2010

Genovese Associate Gets 30 Years For Role In Slaying Of Jeweler


A Bay Terrace mobster who served as a lookout during a fatal botched jewelry heist in West Brighton two years ago was sentenced this morning to 30 years in prison. In April, a Brooklyn federal court jury convicted Anthony Pica, 31, of robbery conspiracy and weapons charges, as well as causing death through firearm use stemming from the slaying of jeweler Louis Antonelli, 43, of Grasmere.
antonelli.jpg
Detectives and police officers stand near the black SUV in the small alleyway where Louis Antonelli was shot.
 
 
Prosecutors contend that Antonelli was shot on April 29, 2008, because he wasn't making tribute payments for jewelry sales at a mob social club in Brooklyn.
According to Brooklyn federal prosecutors, Pica, a Genovese crime family associate, and Christopher Prince, 27, of Ocean Breeze, kept a watch on a restaurant on Broadway where Antonelli was eating. The two men sat in Prince's luxury Range Rover.
Once Antonelli emerged from El Sabor Tropical restaurant and approached his black 1995 GMC Yukon sport utility vehicle, he was ambushed by Charles Santiago and Joseph Gencarelli.
Santiago twice shot Antonelli in the chest before he and Gencarelli fled empty-handed. Antonelli was carrying jewelry valued at $250,000, according to court testimony.
Antonelli was rushed to nearby Richmond University Medical Center, West Brighton, but died of his wounds May 12.
Santiago, 27, of Grant City, pleaded guilty in October to robbery conspiracy and weapons counts and will spend 30 years to life in prison as part of his deal.
Gencarelli, 28, a former city Department of Environmental Protection sewage-treatment worker from Grant City, claimed he only went along for the robbery and had no idea plans included shooting Antonelli.
He and Prince, an alleged Genovese associate, have also cut plea deals. All three defendants await sentencing as does Salvatore (Sally Fish) Maniscalco of Brooklyn, who prosecutors said recruited the stickup gang.
A sixth man, New Dorp resident John (Wizzie) DeLutro another lookout, was in "near-constant" telephone contact with Pica, said the U.S. attorney's office for the Eastern District of New York.
DeLutro, 33, and Maniscalco, 36, have both been linked to the Genovese family.
DeLutro was sentenced in May to 20 years in prison after previously pleading guilty to robbery conspiracy.
Investigators also suspect Jason Aiello, Antonelli's companion on the day he was shot, of setting up the jeweler for a cut of the illicit proceeds. Aiello died in a shootout with police in July 2008 in Rosebank.
Also charged in the case was Genovese capo Anthony (Big Nose) Antico.
Prosecutors allege the longtime mob bigwig ordered the robbery on Antonelli; however, a Brooklyn federal court jury acquitted him of that charge last month.
But jurors convicted Antico, 74, of running an illegal gambling parlor on Sand Lane, South Beach, from 2004 to 2006. He was also found guilty of conspiring to rob the winner of a $1 million Pick Six horse-racing bet in 2008.

http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/2010/08/bay_terrace_mobster_sentenced.html

Thursday, July 29, 2010

Trial Update: Mixed Verdict In Anthony Antico Trial


A 74-year-old Genovese crime captain was convicted of racketeering Thursday, but beat the rap for ordering the fatal robbery of a Staten Island jeweler-to-the-mob.
Prosecutors argued that Anthony Antico gave the go-ahead to a crew of thugs to rob Louis Antonelli because the jeweler was paying cash tribute to the gangster for the privilege of selling his gems and watches in his social club. But the stick-up went bad and Antonelli was fatally shot.
Defense lawyer Matthew Mari said the acquittal on the robbery count was huge, and not only because it would have guaranteed Antico spent the rest of his life behind bars.
"He (Antico) told me he's glad the Antonelli family will finally know he had nothing to do with it," Mari said after the verdict in Brooklyn Federal Court.
The jury rejected the testimony tying Antico to the heist by two thugs who pleaded guilty to participating in the robbery.
Antico was convicted of running from prison an illegal gambling club on Sand Lane in Staten Island, and conspiring to extort Mario Gulinello, a Brooklyn man who had won $1.6 million picking the winners of six horse races at the Santa Anita racetrack in 2004.
The FBI had a wiretap on Genovese associate Joseph Barrafato Jr.'s phone when he was discussing the extortion plot with Antico -- the wire also picked up Barrafato chatting with his dog named "Sparky" while waiting for Antico to get on the line.
The jury also acquitted Antico of shaking down the owner of a Staten Island bagel shop -- a charge that was largely supported by the testimony of former Gambino capo Michael "Mikey Scars" DiLeonardo.

Saturday, July 24, 2010

Mob Canaries Take Court Pounding


The government trotted out the dregs of humanity to take the witness stand in the racketeering case against reputed Genovese capo Anthony "Big Nose" Antico, his defense lawyer said yesterday.

"A parade of some of the most disgraceful human beings on the face of the Earth" is how the alleged mobster's lawyer, Gerald McMahon, described the government's witnesses in closing arguments.

Antico, 74, is charged with shaking down a Staten Island deli, plotting to rob a $1 million lottery winner, running a gambling parlor and ordering the botched robbery of a Staten Island jeweler. The jeweler, Louis Antonelli, was shot twice and died in 2008 from his wounds.

The feds maintain that Antico pulls the strings in the Genovese family and ordered the robbery of Antonelli.

http://www.nypost.com/p/news/local/staten_island/canaries_take_court_pounding_vuOKCevb3dxARvK6ovBV3M#ixzz0ucSnIVpM

Wednesday, July 21, 2010

Trial Update: Anthony Antico


One look at Anthony Antico sitting at the defense table and you swear he was born to be on trial for something.
By the way the 74-year-old Genovese family capo throws up his hands and mouths, “So what?” to a bugged phone conversation played back in court Monday afternoon, it’s a cinch the old goat is a natural. 
antico.jpg
Accused Genovese mobster Anthony Antico is on trial for racketeering and robbery in the murder of Grasmere jeweler Louis Antonelli.
When U.S. District Judge Carol Amon gathered jurors last week for pretrial instructions at Brooklyn federal court, where “Tico” is on trial for racketeering and robbery in the murder of Grasmere jeweler Louis Antonelli, Tico occupied himself by burying every knuckle in his nostrils one at a time as if he were digging for Jimmy Hoffa.
Then he treated the courtroom to a matinee by licking his fingers.
Tico’s family said later that he was giving the jury a nose-picking show because he is “stressed” and the pressure of the trial is causing his nose to bleed.
Stress? Since when do mobsters show stress during a trial? Can’t a wiseguy pick his nose in court simply because he has the couth of an orangutan?
After all, they don’t also call Tico “Big Nose” for nothing.
No, Tico can relax, at least according to his lawyers.
Those federal racketeering conspiracy, robbery and weapons charges are bogus, Tico’s attorneys say, because Tico was nowhere near the El Sabor Tropical restaurant in West Brighton April 29, 2008, when Louie the Jeweler took two bullets in the chest.
Antonelli, who sold his jewelry at Tico’s social club in Brooklyn, died about a week later.
Prosecutors say Tico ordered the robbery of Antonelli because the jeweler wasn’t making his tribute payments.
Such is life when you make your living selling bling-bling to the mob. Mobsters love their bling even more than they love giving shiny gems to their wives and goombahs.
So much so, that when Louie the Jeweler showed up carrying cases of gold and silver rings, bracelets and necklaces made out of diamonds, rubies and sapphires, it should have been Louie’s pleasure to sell them all the bling they wanted and then kick the money back to Tico and the other higher-ups as tribute for sharing their space.
And by the tone of one wiretapped phone conversation between Tico and Antonelli, all was well at the social club in 2006 — even though Tico was calling from prison at the time.
“Miss you very much,” Tico told Louie the Jeweler without a trace of a hint that there was a problem.
Then Grant City role models Charles Santiago and Joseph Gencarelli showed up at El Sabor Tropical two years later and Louie the Jeweler was a memorial tribute.
Some robbery that turned out to be.
Although jewelry appraiser and prosecution witness Stacy Seger estimated that Antonelli was carrying about $250,000 worth of jewelry at the time, Santiago and Gencarelli skedaddled from the scene of the crime empty-handed.
Oh, sure, cooperating rats like Salvatore (Sally Fish) Maniscalco and Colombo wiseguy Michael (Mickey) Souza leap-frogged each other to cut deals with the feds and get on the stand to finger Tico as the guy who gave the order to rob Antonelli.
But there was no robbery.
It’s iffy to claim there was even an attempted robbery.
Prosecutors say Santiago shot Louie the Jeweler with Gencarelli at his side while Sally Fish, John (Wizzie) DeLutro and Anthony Pica stood lookout.
The other witness, Antonelli’s bodyguard, Joseph Aiello, killed himself a couple of months later. Now he’s too dead to get up on the stand and say whether he was the one who actually set up Louie the Jeweler for the hit.
That’s a tough robbery conviction to pin on Tico.
But all bets are off if the old coot starts picking his nose again.

http://blog.silive.com/around_the_block_column/2010/07/goodfella_with_bad_manners.html

Tuesday, July 20, 2010

Colombo Mobster Begging For Witness Protection



Meet Michael "Mickey" Souza.
Before legendary Colombo underboss John "Sonny" Franzese pricked Souza's finger with a sterile diabetic needle in 2005 to make him a made man, Souza had built quite the fiasco-filled résumé.
There was the time he shot himself, Plaxico Burress-style, while tucking a handgun in his sweatpants. There's his arrest for boating while drunk. And then there was the time he injured one of his fellow goons while the two busted up a funeral parlor.
If an organization is no better than its worst guy, then the Colombos are indeed in trouble.
And what thanks do they get for taking in this mopey mobster? He's now turned stool pigeon.
Souza, 42, made his debut on the witness stand last week at the racketeering trial of Genovese gangster Anthony Antico in Brooklyn Federal Court.
He was facing 30 years to life for drug trafficking when he sought a cooperation agreement from the feds.
"'Hello, John,'" he wrote to John Buretta, the chief of the Brooklyn U.S. attorney's organized-crime section, in 2008, offering to help "seal up" some federal cases.
"P.S. I am so ready to go to [the witness protection program] ... can't do this anymore," Souza concluded.
His testimony - and dramatic turn against the bosses - speaks to the Colombos' disarray and lowering of standards for supposed "men of honor."
"Their [the Colombos'] roster is getting pretty thin," conceded a law enforcement official.
Souza's troubles go way back.
He was "honorably discharged" from high school because "I baseball-batted somebody on school property," he testified. He instead graduated to loansharking, drug dealing and running a Staten Island gym called Evolution, where wiseguys and wanna-bes pumped iron.
And after assaulting his own wife, he was marked for death by his mobbed-up father-in-law.
But maybe worst of all was violating a previously unknown rule by exposing himself in a Staten Island bar owned by a gangster.
"You know, the rules, you don't take out your private part in a wiseguy's place," Souza said on the stand, in describing his past with the mob.
In Souza's bizarro world, "sitdowns" to settle beefs are now called "standups" - "you talk on the corner." And he paid the medical bills for a guy whose eye he popped out during a grisly fight.
But Souza said he sees the Mafia more clearly now. "There's no honor in this life. It's all about the dollar," he said.

Friday, July 16, 2010

Picky, picky! 'Nose' is gross


Say it's snot so.
A reputed crime-family captain, with the nom-de-mob "Big Nose," dug in for some nasal gabagool during an appearance in Brooklyn federal court yesterday -- picking and pulling the entire time the judge instructed the jury on deliberations.
Then he disgustingly licked every finger.
Anthony Antico, 74, who is on trial on for a variety of racketeering charges, spent a good 10 minutes probing his proboscis.
Relatives at the trial swear that the alleged mobster -- who has health problems -- is so stressed that it's making his nose bleed.
Anthony Antico.

Anthony Antico.
 

Thursday, July 15, 2010

Jeweler gunned down for dissing high-ranking member of Genovese crime family: feds


                                                                        Louis Antonelli

A mobbed-up Staten Island jeweler fatally shot in a botched robbery was targeted because he disrespected a high-ranking mobster in the Genovese crime family, a federal prosecutor said Wednesday.
Louis Antonelli's offense was failing to kick up cash tributes to capo Anthony Antico for the privilege of peddling gems in Antico's social club, Assistant Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Nicole Argentieri said in opening arguments of the gangster's racketeering trial.
Antonelli, 43, was gunned down on April 29, 2008, in West Brighton, S.I., as he was approaching his vehicle shortly after retrieving jewelry from a nearby storage facility.
Defense lawyer Gerald McMahon blasted the government witnesses lined up to testify against the 74-year-old Antico, calling mob associate Stefan Cicale "a chain saw murderer" for dismembering a gangland victim and former Gambino capo Michael DiLeonardo "a mass murderer."
Later, Federal Judge Carol Amon got the lawyer to concede that Cicale chopped up the victim's corpse, making him merely a "desecrater of the deceased."
Antico is charged with illegal gambling, giving his approval to a crew of thugs to rob Antonelli in 2008 and the extortions of a bagel shop and a lottery winner.
 

Sunday, May 16, 2010

Genovese Mobster Gets 20 Years


Flag of Staten IslandImage via Wikipedia
John "Wizzie" DeLutro has been sentenced by a federal judge in Brooklyn, NY to 20 years in prison for his role in the 2008 slaying of Staten Island jeweler Louis Antonelli during a botched robbery outside a restaurant two years as reported by Frank Donnelly for the Staten Island Advance.  Reputed Genovese capo Anthony "Big Nose" Antico allegedly planned the heist because the jeweler owed money, and he is scheduled for trial in the case on July 6.
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