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

Showing posts with label Salvatore Vitale. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Salvatore Vitale. Show all posts

Thursday, September 21, 2023

Underworld rejoices as longtime former Bonanno Boss Joseph Massino dies in witness protection program



Joseph Massino, the low-key Mafia boss who stunned the world of organized crime in 2005 when it was revealed he had become a government witness, has died after a short illness, sources close to his family told Newsday.

Massino, once a trim and powerful man who would jump off the Cross Bay Boulevard bridge in Queens and swim for hours, battled a number of chronic health conditions including diabetes and obesity. He was 80 and lived until recently in Ohio. Massino died Sept. 14 at a rehabilitation facility in the New York City area, according to the sources.

Massino’s youngest daughter Joanne, who asked that her last name not be published, confirmed his death but declined to comment further.

Over the years Massino navigated the treacherous world of the Mafia families in New York, all the while running legitimate businesses such as a sandwich shop in Queens, catering firms in Farmingdale and the CasaBlanca Restaurant in Maspeth, which he forfeited after a federal racketeering conviction in 2004.

“He ruled with an iron fist and kept order within the ranks,” said former FBI supervisory special agent Charles Rooney, who investigated the Sicilian faction of the crime family in the famous Pizza Connection drug case.

Through tribute paid to by fellow mobsters along with illegal and legal earnings, Massino amassed a fortune and after his conviction, had to turn over $10 million in cash — some of which he had kept in his Howard Beach home — as well as gold bars and other assets.

Massino actually wanted to cooperate within minutes after a Brooklyn federal court jury found him guilty in July 2004 of racketeering, including the orchestration of six mob murders, as boss of the Bonanno crime family. Massino immediately approached presiding Judge Nicholas Garaufis and said he wanted to cooperate, at which point Garaufis appointed him a special lawyer to negotiate.

After several months, it was revealed that Massino, who faced a federal death penalty trial in a different case, was cooperating against fellow mobsters. In 2005, Massino formally entered the federal witness security program. His life sentence was reduced to time served in 2013.

Born in Queens in January 1943, Massino was one of three sons of Anthony and Adeline Massino and lived close to Maspeth. Massino was an athletic young man who earned a reputation as being a street tough after dropping out of school in the seventh grade.

Massino took a number of jobs, including working as a lifeguard at Atlantic Beach on Long Island. As a young adult, Massino started a coffee cart business, serving businesses in the Maspeth area.

But it was in the 1970s that Massino became associated with Philip Rastelli, who rose to become boss of the Bonanno crime family. After Rastelli went to prison, investigators said his trust in Massino grew.

Massino was inducted into the Mafia around 1977 and became a captain in 1979, according to the FBI. Two years later, in May 1981 according to federal court testimony, Massino helped engineer the killings of the three upstart captains — Philip Giaccone, Alphonse Indelicato and Dominic Trinchera.— suspected of trying to gain control of the Bonanno family.

After Massino served time in federal prison in the 1980s, he was officially anointed as boss of the Bonanno family in 1991 upon Rastelli’s death.

Although Massino was a friend of his neighbor John Gotti, head of the Gambino family, he didn’t emulate his public stance and nightlife. Instead, Massino kept a low profile and closed down mob social clubs to frustrate FBI surveillance. To keep his name out of conversations that could be bugged, Massino asked that fellow gangsters refer to him only by tugging on their ears, a gesture that earned Massino the moniker “The Ear.”

But by 2000, the FBI again focused on Massino. The result was a federal indictment that led to his arrest on Jan. 9, 2003, along with his wife Josephine's brother, Sal Vitale. But soon after, Vitale became a government witness against Massino and testified at the mob boss’s 2004 trial.

After he became a government cooperating witness, Massino helped build a case against his former street boss, Vincent “Vinnie Gorgeous” Basciano. Massino also gave information to the FBI that allowed investigators to dig up the bodies of the captains killed in May 1981.

https://www.newsday.com/long-island/obituaries/joseph-massino-mafia-died-80-maspeth-btvng07p

Sunday, November 7, 2021

Wednesday, June 9, 2021

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Bonanno rat is confronted by brother of murder victim in courtroom during testimony



The key witness against four mobsters on trial in Manhattan admitted Wednesday that he set up a close pal to get whacked — not realizing the dead man’s brother was sitting in the courtroom ready to vent his rage.

The defense lawyer for reputed wiseguy Vito Badamo — who along with his cohorts is on trial for loansharking, drug dealing and illegal gambling — questioned capo-turned-canary James “Louie” Tartaglione, 78, for his seeming lack of remorse over his role in several hits.

“You said you didn’t apologize for people whose murder you participated in like Russell Mauro,” the lawyer reminded him of his testimony earlier in the day.

“Well his brother is in this courtroom,” attorney Joseph Donatelli said as he turned to point to a man in the gallery.
 
The brother of Russell Mauro leaving court.

“You want to explain why you killed him?” pressed the lawyer.

From his seat, Mauro’s brother shouted out in front of jurors, “Why? You piece of s–t!”

“Calm down! Calm down!” Justice Mark Dwyer warned the man.

The seething brother, who declined to give his name, replied, “Judge, I waited 20 years to find out why.”

In earlier testimony, Michael Alber, the lawyer for Nicholas “Nicky Mouth” Santora, questioned Tartaglione about his role in luring Mauro to his social club in 1991, where he knew his longtime
pal would be murdered by another mobster. “You said, ‘Hello?’”

“Yes,” answered the FBI informant.

“You walked him in so someone could shoot him and you helped clean up the blood?”

“Yes,” Tartaglione admitted coolly.

Alber also asked the aging ex-wiseguy whether he helped underboss Salvatore Vitale clean up after an infamous hit on three mob captains.
 
James Tartaglione

“I walked in with Sal and he said, ‘Do me a favor, help me remove the shells on the floor,” Tartaglione testified about the scene of the 1981 “Three Capos murder” at the 20/20 Night Club in
Brooklyn.

The mobster-turned-snitch continued, “There were three bodies. The last body was being tied up and canvased, it was already wrapped. We put it in the trunk, and I took it to Woodhaven
Boulevard.”

At one point, the lawyer asked Tartaglione whether he ever said sorry to any of his victims’ families.

“Did I apologize?’’ he asked, looking puzzled. “As a person involved with a crime, if I were to approach a family and say ‘I apologize’ wouldn’t I be indicting myself?”

The defense’s strategy on cross-examination was to undermine Tartaglione’s credibility by highlighting his role in numerous murders.

Although Tartaglione is the case’s star witness, he conceded that he has no direct knowledge of the crimes for which the state has charged defendants Santora, Badamo, Ernest Aiello and Anthony “Skinny” Santoro.

Tartaglione said he has been cooperating with the feds since 2003 to “save myself.”

Santora inspired the character played by the late Bruno Kirby in the 1997 film “Donnie Brasco.”

http://nypost.com/2016/02/17/you-piece-of-s-t-whacked-mans-brother-reacts-to-mobster-confession/

Turncoat Bonanno captain testifies he never actually killed anyone but requested seven murders from his bosses


https://thenypost.files.wordpress.com/2016/02/021616rmob2sh.jpg?quality=100&strip=all&w=664&h=441&crop=1
Bonanno capo-turned-canary James “Louie” Tartaglione shot down claims Tuesday that he murdered seven people during his time in the mob, saying he simply asked his bosses to “whack” the victims —and didn’t actually pull the trigger—as he testified against four mobsters on trial for loansharking, drug dealing and running illegal gambling operations.

The 78-year-old wise guy is the prosecution’s key witness in their trial against Vito Badamo, Ernest Aiello, Anthony “Skinny” Santoro and Nicholas “Nicky Mouth” Santora, who inspired the character played by the late Bruno Kirby in the 1997 film “Donnie Brasco.”

“Did you yourself ever commit the act of killing?” asked Manhattan Assistant District Attorney Gary Galperin, as he referred to the defense’s claims that Tartaglione was not a reliable witness and that he was responsible for the deaths of several “made men” in the Bonanno crime family, including Cesare Bonventre in 1984 and the infamous “Three Capos murders” in 1981.

“No,” replied Tartaglione. “I was there, that’s it.”

Describing one incident from the mid-90s, Tartaglione said he put the word in to have Charles “Crazy Charlie” Tervella murdered, but he later changed his mind.

“Sal, I think I’d like to whack him out,” he recalled asking Salvatore Vitale, an underboss in the Bonnano crime family.

But Tartaglione claimed he didn’t send “Crazy Charlie” to sleep with the fishes after discovering he was stealing money from a Joker Poker slot machine they were running together in Queens— and instead called off the hit.

“After awhile, the anger goes away,” he said.

After shooting down the defense’s murder claims, Tartaglione described how he knew Santora and Badamo from their time in the Bonanno family in the late 90s and early 2000s.

“Vito said his father was a made man,” he explained, describing their first meeting in 1998.

“He said he would like to get straightened out,” which according to Tartaglione, meant being inducted into the mob.
 
James Tartaglione

Describing how he knew Santora, and his involvement in the Bonanno crime family, Tartaglione said, “I was there when he was inducted. I was at the ceremony.”

He added, “Sal gave him things to be concerned about, and then we all held hands and said a prayer.”

In addition to describing his relationship with the Bonanno family, Tartaglione also opened up about the inner workings of the mafia—even going as far as giving meanings to terms heard in famous mob movies such as “Goodfellas” and “Casino.”

“A ‘walk and talk’ is when you walk around and talk business,” he said, adding that there is “no discussing things in the house or club.”

A “wise guy,” “button man” or “Goodfella” is a soldier; a “friend of ours” is considered to be any other made member of the crime family; and a “friend of mine” is known as any associate or friend of a member, Tartaglione said.

He also explained how he ultimately chose to become a federal informant after Vitale was arrested in 2003, saying he was “worried he would tell all my mortal sins.”

“I’m considered to be on the shelf,” Tartaglione said of his current status with the Bonanno family.

He added that anyone who is made a “soldier” keeps that title for life.

“Do you take responsibility for what you did?” Galperin later asked.

“Yes,” replied Tartaglione.

“Are you proud?” asked Galperin.

“No,” Tartaglione said solemnly. “Of course not.”

The former capo is expected to be back on the witness stand on Wednesday for the defense’s cross-examination.

http://nypost.com/2016/02/16/bonanno-snitch-says-he-didnt-actually-kill-anyone/

Monday, November 9, 2015

Trial of Bonanno captain offers inside look into the fall of the NY mafia


After he had helped pull off one of the biggest cash robberies in American history — the Lufthansa heist of 1978 — and stashed millions of dollars, along with burlap sacks of gold chains, crates of watches, and diamonds and emeralds, in his cousin’s basement, Vincent Asaro thought first about the code: Protect the family.

“He says, ‘We got to be real careful now,’” his cousin testified. “‘Don’t spend anything. Don’t buy anything major.’”

He kept quiet, but another part of Mr. Asaro, a Mafia yeoman working his way up through New York’s Bonanno crime family, could not resist. He bought a Bill Blass-model Lincoln and a Formula speedboat — symbols of a man who wanted to belong.

Mr. Asaro did not realize his world was vanishing.

An undated image of Vincent Asaro.

Born in 1935, he entered the same business as his father and grandfather, also Mafia members: a company man even if the company business was murder and extortion. Growing old, Mr. Asaro stayed in his old neighborhood in Queens, shopping at Waldbaum’s, sticking with the routines he knew.

By then, though, other organized crime groups were squeezing out the New York Mafia with new, sophisticated businesses. More devastatingly for him, Mr. Asaro’s friends, superiors and even a relative began informing on him to the government — providing the material that allowed prosecutors to bring charges after all these years, and shredding the Mafia code that defined his life.

Now 80, Mr. Asaro has spent the last three weeks in Federal District Court in Brooklyn, the sole defendant in what may be one of the last big Mafia trials, accused of crimes including a 1969 murder, the Lufthansa heist at Kennedy International Airport — a plot point in the Martin Scorsese movie “Goodfellas” — other robberies and extortions. His arm tattoo has been covered up by sweaters. It reads, “Death Before Dishonor.”

In closing arguments, Elizabeth Macedonio, a defense lawyer, portrayed the cooperating Mafia witnesses as liars, and Mr. Asaro as someone who, despite years of being surveilled by federal agents, was never once caught doing anything wrong.

The case, which is expected to go to the jury Monday afternoon, has depicted a Mafia life from a time when the organization still ruled New York, drawn from testimony, recorded conversations, wiretapped phone calls, court filings and F.B.I. surveillance records going back 40 years. Vincent Asaro was brought down in his old age by a violation of the codes he so embraced; his is the story of the disappearing New York Mafia, and of a disappearing way of life.

Mr. Asaro was escorted by F.B.I. agents on Jan. 23, 2014, after he and four other reputed members of the Bonanno crime family were arrested.

Growing Up Fast

To get by around Ozone Park, Queens, in the 1950s and ’60s, teenagers had to figure certain things out pretty young. “Down the hole” was an Italian area on the border with Brooklyn. Savvy lottery players picked lucky combinations from the Daily News horse-race charts. And, several people testified, around the time they became teenagers, they realized where the power in the neighborhood lay.

Peter Zuccaro, a Mafia associate who testified at Mr. Asaro’s trial, got into a fight over a customer’s not paying for goods at the auto-parts shop where Mr. Zuccaro worked. He was in danger until a Bonanno member intervened, a display of the raw power he came to crave. “It was the thing to do,” he said. “I wanted to be a made member of organized crime.”

The five New York families each have a boss, an underboss and a consigliere ruling them. Captains follow, then soldiers. Under that are associates, who are not made, or inducted, members.

Salvatore Vitale, a former Bonanno underboss, testified at Mr. Asaro's trial.

Salvatore Vitale, a former Bonanno underboss, explained the rules: You did not cooperate with law enforcement. You did not sleep with another member’s wife or daughter. You could sell only pot, not other drugs.

Are the rules broken? an assistant United States attorney, Nicole M. Argentieri, asked him.

“All the time,” Mr. Vitale replied.

This was the family business Mr. Asaro seemed destined for. Anthony Ruggiano Jr., whose father, known as Fat Andy, was a Gambino soldier, began noticing Mr. Asaro when he saw him at Aqueduct or around the neighborhood. Fat Andy said that Mr. Asaro was going to be a third-generation wiseguy, and “thought it was a great thing,” Mr. Ruggiano testified.

Vincent Asaro’s Queens

By the 1960s, Mr. Asaro was known as an “earner” in the Bonannos, a prosecutor, Lindsay Gerdes, said. His cousin Gaspare Valenti, a Bonanno associate before he started cooperating with the government, testified about the early crimes they committed together, like hijacking truckloads of Oleg Cassini shirts. The “scores” were often at the direction of James Burke, a powerful Mafia associate who was Irish. (In “Goodfellas,” Robert De Niro plays the character based on Mr. Burke.)

In 1969, prosecutors said, Mr. Asaro graduated to murder.

One Sunday in 1969, Mr. Asaro and Mr. Burke met Mr. Valenti at a house Mr. Valenti’s father was building in Queens, bringing a sledgehammer and a shovel. “Vinny came up the steps,” Mr. Valenti testified, “and said, ‘We have to bury somebody.’” Mr. Valenti thought he was joking; he was not. The body was that of Paul Katz, a man Mr. Asaro suspected of being a government informant. Mr. Asaro and Mr. Burke had strangled the man with a dog chain, according to Mr. Valenti. Mr. Valenti said he helped them bury the body underneath the basement concrete.

James Burke, a powerful Mafia associate and a friend of Mr. Asaro's. In “Goodfellas,” Robert De Niro plays the character based on Mr. Burke.

In the late 1970s, Mr. Asaro was formally inducted into the Bonannos: Vinny Asaro was a made man. Mr. Zuccaro recalled being at a club called Little Cricket that night. When Mr. Asaro walked in, someone played a song called “Wise Guy,” and then “the whole neighborhood knew,” Mr. Zuccaro said. Soon, Mr. Asaro would show he merited the honor.

Rolf Rebmann was working his usual midnight-to-7-a.m. shift at Building 26 at Kennedy Airport on Dec. 11, 1978, when he heard a “holler” from outside the terminal. His co-workers were upstairs in the lunchroom for their 3 a.m. meal break, so Mr. Rebmann, a Lufthansa security guard, walked outside to see a man standing near a black Ford van.

“I asked him if I could help him, and he said ‘No,’ and stuck a gun in my face and told me to get in the van face down,” Mr. Rebmann testified.

In December 1978, the police cordoned off a stolen black van in Brooklyn, suspecting it had been used in the Lufthansa robbery at Kennedy International Airport.

The assailants wanted Mr. Rebmann’s keys to open the overhead door, and then they walked him upstairs to the lunchroom. “Somebody kept saying: ‘Just do as you’re told, do as you’re told. We don’t want to hurt anybody.’”

Led by Mr. Burke, they had been tipped off to the valuable cargo shipments by an airport employee.

They had pulled off what was then billed as the largest cash robbery in United States history, stealing $5 million in cash and $1 million in jewels.

Gaspare Valenti, who testified he was one of the two men who attacked the guards, said Mr. Asaro had allowed him to come. In planning sessions at the Queens social club Robert’s Lounge, Mr. Burke, Mr. Asaro, Mr. Valenti and several other men looked over airport plans, and agreed to visit the terminal at least twice to map out escape routes, Mr. Valenti testified.

A Guyanese and Jamaican restaurant now operates at the site of the former Robert's Lounge in Ozone Park, a notorious mob hangout. According to trial testimony, much of the planning of the Lufthansa robbery was done there.

Mr. Asaro drove Mr. Valenti to Mr. Burke’s house the night of the robbery, giving him a .38 hammerless pistol and an instruction: “‘Anything happens, just stand your ground and continue to do the robbery the best you can,’” Mr. Asaro told him, Mr. Valenti testified. Mr. Asaro and Mr. Burke said they would wait in a decoy car a mile away, and the others piled into a van and headed for the terminal.

When they got into the vault, one of the robbers, Tommy DeSimone, took a box from a shelf and stepped on it, Mr. Valenti testified. “The yellow Styrofoam popcorn popped out of the boxes, and Tommy put his hand in there, and he pulled out two packages of money,” Mr. Valenti said. “Tommy says, ‘This is it! This is it!’”

Tommy DeSimone was one of the Lufthansa robbers, according to trial testimony.

After unloading the haul in Mr. Valenti’s basement, Mr. Asaro left for Fat Andy’s social club. When Mr. Valenti, feeling “euphoria,” met him at Fat Andy’s, Mr. Asaro issued his warning to be careful. Mr. Asaro was: He stayed away from Mr. Valenti for a while, kicked up $100,000 to his captain, distributed jewelry to the Five Families to keep the peace and asked friends to hold on to the cash so it wasn’t in one place. He even worried that throwing out the cardboard boxes that contained the cash might draw unwanted attention. So he came up with the idea for Mr. Valenti to sell Christmas trees, so a cheery bonfire would not look out of place.

He had reason for the concern. Headlines throughout that December blared about the daring robbery, and by just after Christmas, agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation were watching Mr. Asaro visit Mr. Burke’s house in Queens.
Style of the 1950s

In the years after Lufthansa, the participants who were still around had enough money that they should have been able to stop working. Mr. Valenti got his $750,000 share, as did Mr. Asaro. Most of the others were killed or disappeared (deaths prosecutors attribute in part to Mr. Burke, who died in 1996 while serving his sentence).

Mr. Asaro, smart enough to stay alive, aware enough not to talk too much about Lufthansa, apparently still wanted a little fun. He gambled heavily, and started a Rockaway Boulevard nightclub called Afters, which Mr. Valenti said was a reference to “After Lufthansa.”

Mr. Asaro acted, in some ways, as if it were the 1950s and the mob were at its height. He placed bets at Aqueduct. He played handball and paddleball, poker and Continental. He oversaw truck hijackings and armored-car robberies. In a series of surveillance photographs, he seemed the picture of easy confidence. He even waved at an F.B.I. agent one day, according to testimony.

Clockwise from top left, surveillance photographs of Vincent Asaro at J&S Cakes/MVP Trucking in 1987, at a social club at 433 Meeker in 1989, outside Glendale Sports Club in 2013 and at James Burke's wake in 1996 at Romanelli Funeral Home.

But it was the 1980s, and the Mafia, after years of prosperity and influence, was beginning a steep decline. The police and F.B.I. agents infiltrated the mob. Federal prosecutors charged the bosses of the Five Families using a powerful racketeering act, and four of the five were imprisoned (the fifth was killed before trial). Suddenly, even friendly local politicians stopped supporting the families.

On the other side, the Mafia was getting squeezed by crime syndicates from Japan, Russia, Mexico and Eastern Europe doing drug trafficking, human trafficking and arms dealing. The mob, though it still made money from extortion and gambling, was not evolving, and neither was Mr. Asaro.

Into the 1990s, Mr. Asaro was still threatening neighborhood shops. An Ozone Park resident, Guy Gralto, testified that when he opened his chop shop in the 1990s, Mr. Asaro asked for “protection money.” When Mr. Gralto could not pay, Mr. Asaro hit him and said that “when he was done with me my mother wouldn’t be able to ID my body,” Mr. Gralto testified.

Joseph C. Massino, the former Bonanno family boss, was the first official boss of a New York crime family to cooperate with federal authorities.

But as he grew older, his bosses considered Mr. Asaro “hostile,” as Mr. Vitale, the former Bonanno underboss, put it. In the 1990s, the boss demoted Mr. Asaro because “he was abusing his leadership position by ‘robbing’ the individuals who reported to him,” and was low on money from too much gambling, prosecutors wrote. Prosecutors do not name the mob boss in the papers, but the details they give match those of Joseph C. Massino, who later began cooperating with the government. Prosecutors discussed calling him to testify at Mr. Asaro’s trial, according to transcripts.

An enfeebled New York Mafia limped into the new millennium. One associate, Peter Zuccaro, enthralled with the Mafia since he was a teenager, declined the offer when he was told he was being made around 2000. “I didn’t need it,” he said; he began informing a few years later. In 2003, Mr. Vitale started cooperating with the government, and helped convict more than 50 Mafia figures. That was followed by a once-unthinkable betrayal. In 2005, a mob leader flipped for the first time. It was Joe Massino, Mr. Asaro’s onetime boss.

Mr. Asaro did not seem to question it when his cousin Gaspare Valenti, who had been in Las Vegas and not speaking to Mr. Asaro, returned to New York and befriended him in 2010. Mr. Valenti was secretly working with the F.B.I.

By then, Mr. Asaro was hobbling around trying to generate cash. “I don’t come out early no more,” Mr. Asaro said in 2010. “Where am I going? I got no place to go.”

Since his divorce in 2005, he had been on bad terms with his only son, Jerome, a Bonanno captain. His jewelry had been in hock for two years. He still went to Fat Andy’s, where he had celebrated the Lufthansa robbery, but “people hate me in there: I don’t pay my dues,” he told Mr. Valenti, his cousin, in a conversation Mr. Valenti recorded.

Jerome Asaro, Mr. Asaro's son and a Bonanno captain, struck a plea bargain.

He tried to look sharp, though his idea of sharp by then was fresh sneakers and a jacket from Kohl’s. As other organized crime was getting ever more sophisticated — hacking into bank accounts, stealing identities — Mr. Asaro was still talking about small robberies and little shakedowns.

He worried he was so irrelevant he would be kicked out of the Mafia altogether. “They’re going to take my badge away. You’re going to see, it’s going to happen,” he told Mr. Valenti in 2011, according to a recording played in court. By 2012, the group’s waning membership was such that he told Mr. Valenti that he was promoted to captain again. It did not change his fortunes. “I ain’t got a penny. I swear to God. No gas. Twenty dollars can you lend me?” he told Mr. Valenti.

In 2014, the F.B.I. finally closed in, arresting Mr. Asaro. Prosecutors charged him with racketeering conspiracy, including the Lufthansa robbery and Paul Katz’s murder, and extortion. Four other Mafia members, including his son, were arrested the same day. They all struck plea bargains. Mr. Asaro did not.Photo

Vincent Asaro, left, looked on as Mr. Vitale testified during Mr. Asaro's trial in this court sketch Oct. 19.

During the trial, which started in October, traces of Mr. Asaro’s verve were on display. He insisted on a clear line of sight to the turncoats, mouthing obscenities as they testified. Some moments struck him as amusing — when he heard a tape of himself telling Mr. Valenti he had a “face made of [expletive] plutonium,” he put his head in his hands and chuckled.

But the trial made it clear. Omertà was no more. People above him had flouted the code, people below him had flouted the code, and the last one left was Mr. Asaro clinging to his credo. He seemed angry and betrayed.

Partway through the trial, angry that his lawyers were not cross-examining more aggressively, he asked to speak to Judge Allyne R. Ross of Federal District Court. “I just want some input in the case, your honor,” he said. “This is my life. This is my life. I’m 80 years old.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/10/nyregion/trial-of-vincent-asaro-highlights-loss-of-mafias-code-of-silence.html?_r=0

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Murder victim's son testifies during Lufthansa heist trial


JUNE 18, 2013 FILE PHOTO
When mob murder victim Paul Katz was getting ready to leave his house after getting a mysterious phone call, his worried wife told him to take one of the kids along — as protection.

“He said no,” Katz’s son Lawrence testified Tuesday at the trial of a Vincent Asaro, the 80-year-old Bonanno hood and Lufthansa heist leader accused of helping strangle his father with a dog chain.

“She said at least take the dog, but he said no. He said, ‘If I'm not home in a couple of hours, call the cops.’”

And those were the last words, the younger Katz testified in Brooklyn federal court, he ever heard his father say.

The remains of Katz, who Asaro suspected of being a rat, were found buried in Queens basement in June 2013 — 44 years after his death.

Investigators were led there by mob turncoat Gaspare Valenti, who has already testified that his cousin Asaro and James "Jimmy the Gent" Burke murdered Katz.

Burke was the brains of the spectacular 1978 robbery at Kennedy Airport that netted nearly $6 million in cash and jewels — and was dramatized in the mob movie “Goodfellas.”
 
Vincent Asaro is accused of helping strangle Paul Katz with a dog chain.

Valenti, the government’s star witness, testified earlier that Katz had a warehouse in Ozone Park, Queens where Burke’s crew stashed stolen property from truck hijackings.

Burke began to suspect Katz after the warehouse was raided in 1968 and all the members of the crew, including Asaro, were arrested.

In his testimony, Lawrence Katz said after his father was busted an NYPD officer cop began calling the house and he recalled arguments between his dad and mom. He recalled his father drawing a picture of a house at the dinner table.

"He said, ‘Soon we are going to move into the country,’” testified.

On Dec. 6, 1969, when his father disappeared, Lawrence Katz, who was 5-years-old at the time, testified that he and his siblings were watching TV when his dad got the call. He described his mother, Dolores, as “nervous” and “panicking.”

Assistant U.S. Attorney Alicyn Cooley asked the witness what their mother made them do after their dad left.

Vincent Asaro (l.) looks on as Sal Vitale testifies during Asaro's trial.

"Hide in the dark," he replied.

Later, the family moved out of New York City.

Katz’s corpse was buried under the concrete floor of a new home in Ozone Park on 102d Road. About 20 years later, the remains were removed by Asaro's son, Jerome, and taken upstate where they were put into paint cans and buried, Valenti said.

When Valenti returned with the feds to the basement, all they found was small bones, teeth, and hair.

An FBI agent who followed Lawrence Katz on the stand testified they were positively identified as belonging to his father.

Asaro, who had sat quietly through the testimony, piped-up when prosecutor Nicole Argentieri showed the G-man an enlarged photo of the basement floor.

“Excuse me, could I see that please?" he asked.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/son-mob-murder-victim-testifies-lufthansa-trial-article-1.2422481

Monday, October 19, 2015

Turncoat Bonanno underboss testifies at trial of captain accused in Lufthansa heist



NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
“Goodfellas” came to life Monday in a Brooklyn courtroom at the trial of an aging Bonanno gangster as prosecutors revisited the “score of all scores” — the infamous 1978 Lufthansa robbery.

They also put the first of several rats on the stand to testify against 80-year-old Vincent Asaro, starting with a former Bonanno underboss and admitted killer named Salvatore Vitale.

But the government’s star witness is mob stick-up man Gaspar Valenti, who could be take the stand as early as Tuesday at Asaro’s racketeering trial.

And like a scene from another famous mob movie, Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Godfather Part II,” Valenti’s hulking son was in the courtroom Monday to stare his 68-year-old father down.

“I’m here for Vinny,” Anthony "Fat Sammy" Valenti, a reputed soldier in the Bonanno crime family, told The Daily News.


Asked about his turncoat father, he said, “I could care less about him.”

In her opening statement, Assistant U.S. Attorney Lindsay Gerdes told the court Asaro planned the heist at Kennedy Airport with legendary Lucchese mobster James "Jimmy the Gent Burke, who was portrayed in “Goodfellas” by Robert De Niro.

Gerdes said Asaro personally pocketed more than $500,000.

“He knew Burke was someone he could make money with,” Gerdes said. “Jimmy Burke and Vincent Asaro were true partners in crime.”

Asaro was a made man in the Bonanno organized crime family since the 1970s, following in the footsteps of his father and grandfather, Gerdes said.

“For him, the Mafia was literally the family business,” she said. “The defendant is a gangster through and through.”
 
In this Dec. 13, 1978, file photo, police cordon off an area around a stolen black van discovered in the Brooklyn borough of New York. Police suspect the van was used by thieves who escaped with more than $6 million in cash and jewels from a John F. Kennedy International Airport hangar.

In the weeks leading up to the robbery, Asaro, Burke and the “robbery team met, they talked, they visited the cargo building to get a lay of the land,” Gerdes said. “On the night of the heist itself, the robbery team brought all the tools they would need — guns, masks, gloves.”

“The defendant and Jimmy Burke waited nearby in a car, ready to act as a crash car if the police happened to stumble upon the crew,” she said.

Gerdes laid out the government’s case against the Asaro ahead of expected testimony from Valenti, who is also the accused mobster’s cousin and will give his account of the robbery immortalized in the Martin Scorsese movie.

Vincent Asaro's trial began on Monday.

New of the Lufthansa heist on Dec. 12, 1978.

Asaro had recruited Valenti as a member of the crew, prosecutors said. But the greedy gangster allegedly kept Valenti’s share.

That cheap move by the old wise guy is now about to haunt him in court. Valenti recorded hundreds of hours of incriminating conversations with Asaro over the years.

Asaro, a once-obscure Bonanno hood, is the latest mobster to be dragged out of the shadows by the crumbling of omertà — the Mafia code of silence by which members of New York’s five Italian crime families lived and died.

Dressed in a gray pullover sweater, Asaro was chewing gum when he came into the courtroom — looking more like a cranky old man than a gangster.

In a nod to his age, the federal marshals agreed to transport Asaro to the courthouse separately from the bus load of other Metropolitan Detention Center prisoners with court date. This was so the oldfella could sleep in a bit longer, sources said.

The spectacular Dec. 11, 1978 Lufthansa robbery, carried out with the inside information provided by crooked airport workers, netted nearly $6 million in cash and jewels.

The robbers clipped a lock on a fence and made their way into the terminal building where they held workers at gunpoint, the prosecutor said.

When they reached the vault: “Jackpot!” Gerdes said. “Boxes upon boxes of money and jewelry. More than they could have ever imagined.”

Asaro plowed his Lufthansa cash into loansharking, but gambled most of it away at the race track, the prosecutor said. He also kicked up $100,000 to the Bonanno family through then-capo Joseph Massino.

Massino, who broke with the mob back in 2011, is expected to tell the jury about getting a piece of the Lufthansa loot.

Burke died of cancer in 1996 while serving a 20-year to life sentence for murder.

When Vitale took the stand, he testified he too only got a pittance from the robbery.

“He was always a big spender,” Vitale cracked, referring to his brother-in-law Massino.

Looking dapper in a navy blue suit and print necktie, Vitale testified that Massino gifted him with a single gold necklace from the briefcase brimming with baubles stolen in the robbery that Asaro gave him to take to a fence on Canal St.

“This is from the Lufthansa score,” Massino said, according to Vitale.

As for Asaro, Vitale told the court he was often a hothead at mafia sitdowns.

“You're supposed to be respectful to people across the table,” Vitale said. “Vinny gets hostile."

Vincent Asaro (l.) and Judge Allyne Ross look on as prosecutor Lindsay Gerdes (r.) makes opening statements in Asaro's trial in this court sketch on Monday.

Vitale also identified a list of mobsters who were proposed for induction into the Bonanno family, a list that included Fat Sammy.

As Vitale testified, Asaro glared at him and appeared to be muttering the F-word under his breath. At one point he complained the court stenographer was blocking his view of the witness.

In a sign of how times have changed, Vitale was asked by a prosecutor to describe what a “pre-cell phone” phone book looks like. Among the names in the yellowing pages of Vitale’s phone book were “Tommy Shot” and “Vinny Green from Las Vegas.”

Vitale, who made his ninth appearance as a government witness, also lamented his life in witness protection and said it was impossible to find legit work, suggesting he’d applied for jobs at Target and Walgreens.

Scenes from the movie " Goodfellas " shot at Neir's Tavern in Woodside, Queens.

"Who's going to hire someone in his 60s who has a Social Security card that was just issued and sounds like a wise guy from Brooklyn?" Vitale said. "I've been turned down by every company."

When Vitale revealed he was given a $250,000 payment from the feds for being a whistleblower, Asaro shook his head.

Living in witness protection is "one lie after another until you find solid ground,” Vitale said. “If I had to do it again, I would have kept it real and gone to jail.”

Judge Allyne Ross ruled earlier that prosecutors cannot tell the jury about the bloodbath that followed the robbery because Burke was responsible for whacking a half-dozen members of the crew, not Asaro.

But every single anonymous juror who filled out a questionnaire for the trial acknowledged they have seen “Goodfellas,” during which a half-dozen accomplices are found whacked while the Derek and The Dominos masterpiece “Layla” plays in the background.

Handcuffed James Burke "Jimmy the Gent" taken to Federal Court.

Asaro is also charged with the murder of a suspected snitch in 1969, extortion, and arson.

In her opening statement, defense attorney Diane Ferrone dismissed the witnesses against Asaro as a bunch of murderers and liars.

Ferrone called Valenti a con artist who became a paid government informant in the late 2000s and agreed to wear a wire to record his conversations with Asaro.

“You shouldn’t believe him because his latest con victim is the United State government,” Ferrone said.

As for Valenti and other government witnesses, Ferrone said, “When necessary, they lie to each other and they lie to save themselves. ... Once a liar, always a liar.”

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/trial-begins-accused-mobster-asaro-lufthansa-heist-article-1.2402784

Sunday, June 7, 2015

Feds disclose details of 1978 Lufthansa robbery


The Bonanno gangster charged with the infamous 1978 Lufthansa robbery allegedly blew his nearly $1 million share of the loot gambling at the racetrack, the Daily News has learned.

Federal prosecutors, in their most detailed disclosure to date about evidence against reputed capo Vincent Asaro, have revealed stunning secrets in the long-unsolved airport heist.

The feds have lined up an impressive roster of rats with knowledge of Asaro’s participation in the Lufthansa heist — immortalized in the classic film “Goodfellas.”

Robert De Niro as James Conway and Chuck Low as Morris "Morrie" Kessler in "Goodfellas."

Former Bonanno boss Joseph Massino will testify that he was Asaro’s captain at the time and was given by Asaro an attaché case filled with gold and jewelry as tribute. Asaro’s cousin, Gaspare Valenti, also participated in the robbery and recently wore a wire to nail Asaro for the government.

Ex-Bonanno underboss Salvatore Vitale will testify that he saw Massino, his brother-in-law, sorting through the jewelry and was given a gold chain from the airport booty.


Gambling losses are the reason Vincent Asaro, 80, allegedly blew nearly $1 million from his share of the heist.

Former Gambino associate Anthony Ruggiano Jr., will testify that his father, the late John Gotti crew member Anthony "Fat Andy" Ruggiano, helped Asaro and Burke fence the stolen jewelry.

The $6 million robbery left a trail of bodies in its wake.

Two months after the holdup, Richard Eaton was strangled by Lufthansa mastermind James "Jimmy the Gent" Burke over a drug deal financed by a portion of the proceeds from the heist, according to court papers.

Asaro delivered Easton’s body to a cousin’s house and told him to borrow a neighbor’s backhoe to dig a grave.

The body, with a rope still tied around the neck, was stashed in a refrigeration truck and found by children before the hole was dug, in a scene depicted in the Martin Scorsese movie.

It took two days to defrost his remains for an autopsy.

Burke, being led into court, died in prison in 1996.

That was one of many screw-ups by Asaro in his up-and-down Mafia career. He wasted his take from of the Lufthansa loot gambling at the racetrack, stated Assistant U.S. Attorneys Alicyn Cooley and Nicole Argentieri.

His gambling addiction also led to his demotion to the mob rank of soldier in the 1990s.

Prosecutors identified a roster of deceased Lufthansa alumni including Valenti, Burke, Burke’s son Frank, Angelo Sepe, Joseph "Joe Buddah" Manri, Tommy Desimone, Danny Rizzo, Anthony "Snake" Rodriguez and Louis "Fat Louie" Carfora.

“Each participant of the robbery was supposed to receive approximately $750,000 but most did not live to receive their share (either because they were killed or it was never given to them),” prosecutors wrote in papers.


The Lufthansa heist is seen on the front page of the Daily News on Dec. 12, 1978.

Valenti’s share was glommed by Asaro, but Valenti got the last laugh by secretly taping his cousin ranting: “We never got our right money, what we were supposed to get, we got f---ed all around, that f---ing Jimmy (Burke) kept everything.”

Asaro’s lawyer did not return a call for comment. The trial is scheduled to begin in October in Brooklyn Federal Court.

“Evidence of (Asaro’s) gambling losses and addiction are essential to complete the story of the lucrative criminal schemes charged, including what befell the millions in profits from the Lufthansa Heist,” the court papers state.

Asaro, 80, acknowledged in another secretly taped conversation that he’s a brokefella because he can't help himself when it comes to the ponies.

“If I got a winning ticket and I got to the window, I bet the next race whatever I won in that race, I bet the whole ticket!” he said.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/exclusive-feds-disclose-details-1978-lufthansa-heist-article-1.2239621

Sunday, March 1, 2015

Additional charges expected against Bonanno captain charged in Lufthansa heist case


NYC PAPERS OUT. Social media use restricted to low res file max 184 x 128 pixels and 72 dpi
Prosecutors plan to hit the Bonanno gangster charged in the infamous Lufthansa airport heist with new charges in a superseding indictment.

Reputed capo Vincent Asaro, 79, looked gaunt and shivered uncontrollably as his lawyer argued for a postponement of the racketeering trial scheduled for July in Brooklyn Federal Court.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Nicole Argentieri did not disclose the nature of the two additional counts he will be facing, but they must be of some vintage because she said the evidence is contained on cassette tapes and must be converted to modern media.

Ray Liotta, Robert De Niro, Paul Sorvino and Joe Pesci starred in 'Goodfellas', 1990, about the Kennedy Airport heist.

Asaro is expected to be hit with two additional charges.

The feds have a lineup of rats including ex-Bonanno boss Joseph Massino, ex-underboss Salvatore Vitale and Asaro's cousin Gaspar Valenti to link him to the $6 million Kennedy Airport robbery carried out in 1978 and immortalized in the film "Goodfellas."

Asaro is also charged with the gangland murder of mob associate Paul Katz which was carried out as a favor to Lucchese mobster James "Jimmy the Gent" Burke, who was portrayed by actor Robert DeNiro in "Goodfellas." Asaro's son Jerome pleaded guilty last year to digging up Katz's remains and moving the evidence from the basement of a Queens house owned by Burke in the 1980s.

Outside court, defense lawyer Elizabeth Macedonio said her client has a litany of medical problems but attributed the shivering to him simply feeling cold in the courtroom.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/new-raps-bonanno-mobster-charged-78-jfk-heist-article-1.2113857

Thursday, January 30, 2014

Turncoat Gambino associate is cooperating against Bonanno captain busted in 1978 Lufthansa heist case



 Mugshot of Peter Zuccaro.
There are two other cooperating witnesses, in addition to Joe Massino and Salvatore Vitale, in the latest Bonanno indictment which brings up the old Lufthansa Height of 1978.  CW-1 is a relative of Vincent Asaro, a cousin, who took a plea in Brooklyn federal court recently and went on to tape Vincent for the FBI.  CW-4 is a former Gambino family associate who also took a federal plea.  Based on what the federal court filings say about him, and comparing the known histories, CW-4 is likely Peter Zuccaro.  It was Zuccaro who testified against Charles Carneglia in 2009 in Brooklyn and later at one of the retrials of John Gotti Jr in Manhattan.  Zuccaro had been an acquaintance in the 1970s with Thomas DeSimone, one of close associates of Jimmy Burke, the mastermind of the Lufthansa caper.  DeSimone, whose character was played by actor Joe Pesci in the movie Goodfellas, was killed by the mob for murdering a made member of the Gambino family and other transgressions.

http://tonydestefano.com/id3.html

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Feds use turncoat Bonanno mobsters to bring latest bust


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/5/59/Joseph_Massino,_Salvatore_Vitale_and_Frank_Lino_(surveillance_photo,_1986).jpg
The feds latest indictment of the Bonanno crime family concerning the 1978 Lufthansa Heist appears to involve two key government witnesses--Joseph Massino and his brother-in-law Sal Vitale.  The new indictment accused Bonanno capo Vincent Asaro with involvement in the $6 million grab of money and jewelry at JFK and to build the case against him the FBI cultivated a number of witnesses, among them were two guys listed as "CW-2" and "CW-3".  Based on the court records filed in Brooklyn federal court and the author's own knowledge of events surrounding the Bonanno crime family, CW-2, who is identified as being the boss of the family in the 1990s, is undoubtedly Massino.  He is further identified as someone who was convicted in Brooklyn federal court (as Massino was) of racketeering murder, plead guilty to murder in aid of racketeering (as Massino did), and got resentenced for his substantial cooperation with the FBI to about 12 years (another match with Massino).  Massino, according to the court records, got some of the jewelry loot taken in the Lufthansa heist.  Now in terms of Vitale, he is identified as CW-3 and as a former ranking member of the Bonanno family who plead guilty to racketeering in Brooklyn federal court--which fits Vitale's history.  He was also resentenced after his cooperation to about seven years (another fit with Vitale).  The kicker appears to be that CW-3 testified to and told the FBI that he gave Asaro's son Jerome orders to get rid of the car used in the 1999 murder of Gerlando Sciascia, court records show.  The feds also used two other big informants, CW-1 and CW-4, to make the case.  Alot of things dovetailed to make the charges.  The postscript is that Jimmy Burke, the mastermind of the heist, died in prison and most others involved are dead as well, thanks to Burke's homicidal streak.

http://tonydestefano.com/id3.html

Monday, December 9, 2013

Another longtime Bonanno captain dies in federal custody


 Joseph Cammarano
Another old timer in the Bonanno crime family has died and this page would be remiss in not making a mention of the passing of Joseph Cammarano Sr., on Sepember 3, 2013.  The old Bonanno captain and member of the panel which led the borgata for a while when Joseph Massino was in jail, Cammarano died of respiratory arrest at the federal medical center at Butner , North Carolina at the age of 77.  Cammarano, known as "Joe Saunders" and "Joe C,"was serving a 10 year sentence for murder conspiracy involving the killing in 1990 of Anthony "Boot" Tomasulo.  The murder of Tomasulo was something former Bonanno underboss Sal Vitale admitted in court testimony to having orchestrated. Tomasulo was killed because he was threatening Bonanno family members and was allegedly cheating on gambling earnings.   In a moment recounted in my book "Vinny Gorgeous," Cammarano was caught on surveillance tapes chasing James Tartaglione out of New York in late 2003 after Tartaglione, who was on federal probation, used to travel up from Florida.  Cammarano told Tartaglione to stay in Florida until his probation was done and then he could come back. [Tartaglione was a government witness at that point and secretly taping the conversation with Cammarano] On one of the tapes, Cammarano is heard responding to another mobster's comment that the family of rats and informants should be killed by saying that was something that could not be done.  Cammarano was waked in Brooklyn and according to the funeral home obituary was cremated. 

http://tonydestefano.com/id3.html

Monday, November 25, 2013

Jailed Bonanno captain dies in federal prison


defilippo.jpg
Patrick DeFilippo, the Bonanno captain who squired Vincent Basciano into the crime family, has died in federal prison, according to the Bureau of Prisons.  DeFilippo, who was serving what amounted to a life sentence, died at the age of 74 although it isn't clear whether he died in a prison hospital facility or in a cell.  DeFilippo was convicted in 2006 of five counts of a ten count indictment. The jury found him guilty of racketeering conspiracy involving illegal gambling and a conspiracy to commit to collect a debt by extortion.  However, the jury found him not guilty of two counts of extortionate collection of credit and couldn't reach a verdict on whether he was involved in the 1999 of Gerlando "George From Canada" Sciascia.  Still, he got a 40 year sentence.  DeFilippo was on trial with Basciano, who government officials said wanted to kill DeFilippo at one point while both were mobsters on the street.  In prison, DeFilippo suffered from artherosclerosis and had a pacemaker implanted after he suffered from congestive heart failure, court records show.  He had suffered from fainting spells and was said to have once"died" in hospital before medical intervention brought him back, sometime in 2012. Trial testimony and law enforcement officials said DeFilippo was heavily involved in running Bronx gambling operations for the crime family over the years.  According to witness Sal Vitale, DeFilippo was was on a list of Bonanno family members who were required to make ten percent payments to former boss Joseph Massino from Joker Poker profits.  As noted in the book "Vinny Gorgeous," Patty From The Bronx had long ties to the crime family, beginning with his father's close friendship with the late Joseph Bonanno.  Funeral arrangements and burial information were not yet known.

http://tonydestefano.com/id3.html

Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Joe Waverly seeks help of first mob boss turned rat during NYPD cop's murder trial


Exported.; atx;  
Mob boss Joseph Massino, left, who ducked two life sentences after he became a government informant, may be asked to sing once more —  this time for the defense in Joel "Joe Waverly" Cacace's trial on charges that he ordered a hit on a cop who married his former wife.

The fat man may be singing again.
But this time, heavyset former Bonanno crime boss Joseph Massino might be called as a defense witness for Colombo chieftain Joel "Joe Waverly" Cacace, who is on trial for ordering a hit on an NYPD cop who married the gang goon’s ex-wife.
Massino, 70, was recently freed from prison after a federal judge threw out his two life sentences as a reward for becoming the highest-ranking New York mob boss to become a government rat.

Cacace’s defense team informed prosecutors over the weekend that they needed the tubby turncoat brought to Brooklyn federal court from wherever he’s been relocated. Defense lawyer David Stern declined to say what they might ask Massino.
Last year the feds planned to call Massino as a witness after he claimed he asked Cacace in prison about the 1997 murder of Officer Ralph Dols and Cacace allegedly “smiled.” But Massino later told the feds he could no longer remember the encounter and was dropped from their case.
Massino’s brother-in-law, former Bonanno underboss Salvatore Vitale, testified at Cacace’s trial last week. Vitale, who is also in the witness protection program, said he no longer had any relationship with Massino, who married his sister.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/wiseguy-seeks-mob-informant-cop-kill-trial-article-1.1521514#ixzz2l7E7dsx8

Wednesday, November 13, 2013

Turncoat NYPD cop killer testifies during trial of former Colombo consigliere


Capo on trial for ‘ordering hit’ on cop who’d wed his ex
An embarrassed mobster ordered the brutal murder of an NYPD cop because the officer had the nerve to marry his ex-wife, prosecutors said at a former Colombo consigliere’s trial on Tuesday.
The pony-tailed Joel “Joe Waverly” Cacace’s is accused of orchestrating the 1997 shooting of Ralph Dols outside the Gravesend home he shared with Cacace’s ex-wife, Kim Kennaugh, and their infant child.
“Officer Dols was gunned down for one reason — he dared to marry the wife of a high ranking member of organized crime,”said prosecutor Sam Nitze during his opening statement at Brooklyn federal court.
Nitze painted Cacace, 72, as a ruthless force within the powerful crime clan whose orders were carried out without question.
“They knew that an order from Joel Cacace was an order they had to follow,” Nitze said of the men who carried out the kill.
“The defendant may not have pulled the trigger, but he is responsible because he ordered it.”
But Cacace’s attorney, Susan Kellman, said that there was no evidence that her client had anything to do with Dols’s murder — and that prosecutors were hitching their hopes solely on his association with La Cosa Nostra.
Kellman skewered the government’s main witnesses — the alleged killers — who flipped on Cacace and will testify against him.
Calling them “subhuman,” “maniacs,” and “animals,” Kellman characterized the men as soulless killers who are looking to save their own hide by lying about her client.
“It gives me chills to think about the type of crimes they’ve committed,” she told jurors.
Kellman added that Cacace and his wife had split cleanly and that he didn’t care that she took up with a new man — even a cop.
One of the men involved in the Dols killing, Joseph Competiello, testified Tuesday that he and his pals were ordered to do a “favor” for Cacace by Colombo brass.
Asked what that favor was, the bald-headed, grunting lookout man said simply: “To kill.”
Competiello’s alleged mob accomplices, Dino Saracino and Dino Calabro, were accused of firing the shots that killed Dols.
Calabro admitted to his role in the crime but Saracino and Colombo hoodlum Tommy “Tommy Shots” Gioeli were acquitted last year.
Competiello made a deal with the feds on other killings and is awaiting sentencing.
Now dependent on a cane, Cacace is separately facing 10 more years in prison for his role in the botched 1987 hit on mafia prosecutor William Aronwald. The thugs killed their target’s elderly father by mistake.
One of the killers in the Aronwald case, Eddie Carnini, was married to Kennaugh at the time of that killing.
Cacace allegedly had Carnini killed because of the bungled slay — before shacking up with his widow.
Former Bonnano underboss Salvatore “Good Looking Sal” Vitale also made an appearance Tuesday to offer jurors a basic primer on mob activity.
Currently in a witness protection program for ratting out dozens of mobsters, Vitale’s main mafia rule was a simple one.
“Do what you’re told,” he said.

http://nypost.com/2013/11/12/capo-on-trial-for-ordering-hit-on-cop-whod-wed-his-ex/

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

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Colombo crime boss Thomas Gioeli gave sign to kill while praying in garden of Long Island church


 William Cutolo was killed in an infamous ‘90s mob hit.

In the garden outside a Long Island church, Colombo crime boss Thomas Gioeli folded both hands to pray — or placed just one over his heart to kill.
Mafia killer Dino "Big Dino" Calabro recounted the wordless 1999 gesture that permanently silenced Colombo capo William "Wild Bill" Cutolo in an infamous ‘90s mob hit long shrouded in secrecy.
The unholy, one-handed message from Tommy Shots was delivered inside the grotto at Our Lady of Lourdes Church in Massapequa, L.I., the chief witness against Gioeli testified Tuesday.
The admitted killer of eight also testified about another spectacular ‘90s mob slaying: the killing of a city cop who married the ex-wife of a jealous Colombo consigliere.
In the Cutolo hit, Calabro recalled his summons to meet Gioeli at the church. “That’s the garden where Tommy would go to pray,” he recalled.
Gioeli placed a hand over his heart — a signal that he wanted somebody whacked. He then held up four fingers, indicating that Cutolo — who was missing part of his middle finger — was the target.
The plot involved luring Wild Bill to a Brooklyn home and eliminating him as a threat to then-acting boss Alphonse Persico’s rule atop the Colombos.
Gioeli drove Cutulo to the death house for a purported sitdown between Persico and Wild Bill. Calabro recounted greeting Cutolo in the driveway of the home.
“We shook hands,” Calabro said. “He said, ‘Allie’s here, right? Where are we going?’
“He went in, and I followed him and pulled out my gun and shot him in the head. He just went ‘Whoa,’ and fell backward into the closet.”
To cover up the crime, Cutolo’s watch, beeper and jewelry were mixed into a bucket filled with concrete and dumped off a Brooklyn pier.
The body was wrapped in garbage bags, hog-tied and buried in Farmingdale, L.I. Gioeli waited at a Dunkin’ Donuts while his henchmen put Cutolo into the ground, Calabro said.
Under cross-examination, cold-blooded killer Calabro said he forked over more than $750,000 in crooked gains to the government — not including the $65,000 stolen by his brother, Enzo.
Calabro also said he expected a better sentencing deal than the one given to Bonanno gangster Salvatore Vitale: seven years for 11 murders.
“You want an apology from the government, too?" asked defense attorney Adam Perlmutter.
Calabro earlier recounted his outrage over the 1997 hit ordered on “a Mexican guy who worked in a Queens social club.”
The victim turned out to be off-duty New York police officer Ralph Dols.
Calabro was stunned to learn that he joined in the killing of a cop. He even recalled asking Gioeli if
they should whack the mobster who gave the order, Colombo consigliere Joel "Joe Waverly" Cacace.
Gioeli “took a step back, he listened, and it was never brought up again,” he testified.
The Cutolo killing boosted Calabro’s murderous rep, and he became a made man at a ceremony in 2000. But after achieving his lifelong goal, Calabro’s bloodlust disappeared.
“I was tired of killing,” he testified. “I was tired of being used.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/colombo-crime-boss-thomas-gioeli-gave-sign-kill-praying-garden-li-church-mob-pal-article-1.1051663#ixzz1qMOcCfgI