Tuesday, December 23, 2008

Blue Carmen‘The Cheeseman’ DiNunzio hopes for Christmas charity



Even to this wiseguy’s “family” there’s no place like home for the holidays.
Carmen “The Cheeseman” DiNunzio, who until he was placed on house arrest in May was the reputed underboss of the New England Mafia, is asking a judge to let him spend Christmas Eve and Christmas “in the company of” his brother, Anthony, and nephew, Louis.
U.S. Attorney Michael Sullivan’s office holds the power over who DiNunzio, 51, gets to fraternize with while he awaits trial on a charge of trying to bribe a Big Dig official with $10,000
It was unclear yesterday whether his sibling and nephew are on Sullivan’s naughty or nice list.
DiNunzio is offering to host this week’s merrymaking at the two-family home in East Boston he shares with his mother.
U.S. District Court Magistrate Judge Joyce London Alexander Thursday consented to a request by DiNunzio’s co-defendant, Anthony D’Amore, who is under house arrest in Revere, to attend a Christmas Eve midnight Mass and spend Christmas at a relative’s home.
She is also permitting D’Amore to drive his son to college out of state over a long weekend next month.
DiNunzio, owner of the Fresh Cheese shop in the North End, and D’Amore are accused of trying to execute a deal to sell 300,000 yards of untested loam to the Central Artery Project for $6 million through a man they didn’t realize was an FBI agentReputed ex-Mafia boss Louis
'Baby Shacks' Manocchio arrested ...
Jan 20, 2011 ... Federal authorities arrested Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio, 83, ... Manocchio was charged with conspiracy and extortion for allegedly ... FBI agents from Providence arrested Iafrate Thursday morning at his home in Johnston on charges of ... The Patriarca crime family's power has waned in New England ... http://www.wpri.com/dpp/news/reputed-ex-mob-boss-manocchio-aPROVIDENCE,PROVIDENCE, RI—A reputed former leader of the New England mafia is scheduled to go before a federal judge in Rhode Island for a bail hearing next week. Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio is expected to appear in US District Court in Providence on Tuesday. ... RI mobster to plead guilty in murder-for-hire plot
Boston Globe - ‎Feb 26, 2011‎

PROVIDENCE, RI—A Rhode Island mobster is due to plead guilty in a murder-for-hire plot. Anthony "The Saint" St. Laurent is scheduled to change his plea Tuesday in US District Court in Providence. St. Laurent admitted in court papers file d last month ... Alleged New England mob boss snared in massive sting pleads not guilty http://articles.cnn.com/2011-02-25/justice/rhode.island.mafia_1_mob-boss-la-cosa-nostra-arrest-scores?_s=PM:CRIME
CNN - ‎Feb 24, 2011‎
By the CNN Wire Staff Authorities say Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio extorted cash "protection" payments from strip clubs for two decades. (CNN) -- A reputed former New England mob boss pleaded not guilty Thursday in federal court, just over a month ... - New England mob ex-boss set to appear in court ‎http://www.boston.com/news/local/rhode_island/articles/2011/02/27/new_england_mob_ex_boss_set_to_appear_in_court/
AP - February 27, 2011 11:25 AM ET PROVIDENCE, RI (AP) - A reputed former leader of the New England mafia is scheduled to go before a federal judge in Rhode Island for a bail hearing next week. Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio is expected to appear in US ...Judge keeps 'Baby Shacks' in prison
Medical problems cancel 'Saint' hearing
Back in RI, 'Shacks' pleads not guilty
Feds: 'Shacks' stayed active in the mob
'Baby Shacks' Manocchio is back in RI

Friday, December 19, 2008

Mob Hitman gets contract in Hollywood


By Patriot Ledger staff
The Patriot Ledger
Posted Dec 16, 2008 @ 09:27 AM
Last update Dec 16, 2008 @ 10:06 AM
Winter Hill Gang hit man John Martorano has signed over the rights to his life story to a Hollywood filmmaker, according to published reports.
The Hollywood trade publication Variety is reporting that Martorano, 67, signed a deal with Graham King’s company, GK Films.
The Milton native and former Quincy resident pleaded guilty to murdering 20 people when he was a hit man for James “Whitey” Bulger. He served a little more than 12 years in prison for the murders in exchange for his testimony against other gangsters and corrupt FBI agents including John Connolly, who was convicted last month for his role in the 1982 slaying of former World Jai-Alai President John Callahan. Martorano testified he shot Callahan based on a tip from Connolly, who was an agent in Boston.
Martorano was released from prison in March 2007. At the time, his younger brother, James Martorano of West Quincy, said John had turned down an offer for witness protection and had moved back “near his roots.”
King, the film company owner, told Variety: “When I first met (Martorano), I was struck by his unyielding sense of loyalty to those close to him. John has had a complicated life and it will be a fascinating story to tell the world.”
Variety said King met Martorano through Thomas B. Duffy, a former State Police detective who was technical consultant on two movies filmed in Boston, “The Departed” and “Edge of Darkness.”

Thursday, December 11, 2008

Federal prosecutors eye N.J. capo from Genovese family in 2005 trial rubout




Thursday, December 11th 2008, 4:00 AM

Federal prosecutors named a powerful Genovese family gangster as the prime suspect in the gangland rubout of a fellow capo who was killed while on trial in Brooklyn.
Reputed capo Tino Fiumara is a target in the investigation of the murder of Lawrence Ricci, who disappeared Oct. 7, 2005, in the middle of his waterfront racketeering trial, Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jacquelyn Rasulo and Jack Dennehy disclosed in court papers this week.

Authorities say Fiumara, 67, runs the Genovese faction in New Jersey, including its illicit stake in the waterfront. Ricci reported to him at the time he was killed.

Ricci was killed for going on trial with two officials of the International Longshoremen's Association, sources said.

"They wanted him to plead guilty," a source said. "They didn't want him sitting at the table with the union guys. It didn't look good."

The prosecutors say another capo, Michael (Mikey Cigars) Coppola, could finger Fiumara in the murder.

FBI agents have been squeezing Coppola, who is awaiting trial for a 1977 murder, to cooperate against Fiumara, a knowledgeable source said.

Coppola's lawyer Henry Mazurek, has represented Fiumara, and prosecutors want to boot Mazurek from the case, possibly removing an obstacle to Coppola's cooperation.

"[Coppola] could implicate Fiumara ... in the murder of Lawrence Ricci to potentially receive a reduced sentence," the prosecutors argue.

Law enforcement officials see Fiumara as a potential leader of the Genovese family, which has been without an official boss since the death of Vincent (Chin) Gigante.

Ricci's corpse was found in the trunk of a car in the parking lot of a New Jersey diner. The trial continued in his absence and he was acquitted
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2008/12/11/2008-12-11_federal_prosecutors_eye_nj_capo_from_gen.html

Friday, December 5, 2008

made a living from the dead




Meet Milton Powers aka "Obit Bandit". This vile villain made his living robbing from the dead....For 40 years, he would check the newspapers to see who was being buried that day, then burglarize the dearly departed's house during the funeral service.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Bugsy Siegels best weapon



We all know the Bugsy Siegel back story. How he got shot bla, ,bla.,bla, I brought up Bugsy's name on a show full of mob rocket scientists. There was Jimmy "The Weasel" Fratianno, Pete the Greek , Harry Hall, Blackie Gallo, and a few other college graduates, get my drift.? Well, I posed this question to them all,.. "What is it about guys like Bugsy Siegel and other gangsters that make so many woman like them?" .Fratianno put on his thinking cap, and mulled the question over for a while, then he came up with a real gem, " well, Bugsy was a good tipper, and most broads like that." Pete "The Greek" Diapoulas chimed in with , a broad likes a guy that doesn't have to wait for a table, I mean, the captain gives a mob guy the best table in the joint, and a broad is impressed.".Blackie the booster says, " gangsters dress sharp, they buy all high line suits off of boosters, all boosted from the best joints in Beverly Hills, and they spend, broads love a guy that dresses with class, and he spends his dough on them. . Harry "The Swindler" Hall nailed it when he said, " you know fellas , It was a well known fact that Bugsy had a big schlong , 'and broads love that".
Another True Hollywood Story.by Anthony Fiato

Thursday, November 27, 2008

Love and the mob, Hollywood style



This is the only pair of queens I know of , that can beat a full house.. Denise Brown, well, what can I say, she brings me such scrumptious memories.. Blonde beauty Georgia Durante is a gritty and gutsy gal.

. .
Talk about life in the fast lane, Georgia did everything from driving getaway cars for mob stick up men to delivering mob messages on the down low to Mafia boss Carlo Gambino..

. Georgia's book, "The Company she keeps" is just terrific. We were both on the A&E (Love Chronicles) "Love & The Mob" in Spring 2000.... Georgia sends me an Invite every year to her gala "Godmother" party held in her swanky Tinseltown diggs
..
Anthony "The Animal" Fiato .

Tuesday, November 25, 2008

bad actor made out good




Hollywood actor Alex Rocco was born Alexander F Petricone in Boston.Mass Petricone was known by the nickname "Bobo" in his early years as a hard fisted hood in the infamous Winter Hill Gang
...
According to Vincent Teresa in “My Life in the Mafia,” it was Rocco whose girlfriend Charlestown mobster Georgie McLaughlin tried to pick up on Labor Day weekend 1961, setting off the bloody Irish Gang War.div>

.

Rocco was arrested along with Winter Hill boss, Buddy McLean, as a suspect in the October 1961 murder of a gangster but was never charged.

.Petricone then bolted out of bullet riddled Boston and moved to California in 1962, and began using the name Alex Rocco. . He took acting classes and lost weight..

Rocco made his movie bones and scored the solid-gold role of Mobster,Moe Green in the Godfather. The Winter Hill Mobs most famous felons watched the movie and rooted for Moe Green to whack out Michael Corleone.

Friday, November 21, 2008

Robert Mitchum busted





















Robert Mitchum served 50 days in jail on a marijuana conviction, talks with attorney Jerry Geisler about his release in 1949.


Its no secret that actor Bob Mitchum was my friend. I knew the copper that busted Mitch . His name was Rudy Diaz, (far left ) and he was a real prick.


Rudy hung out at schwabs drug store before and after he retired.


Diaz worked the LAPD Vice squad and then Robbery Homicide. He retired during the early sixties and became a bit player in the movies. He had a pocked marked puss and I called him Pizza face every time i saw him. Mitchum gave the ugly prick a part in one of his movies. Go Figure

Anthony Fiato



























Monday, November 17, 2008

Hollywood Mafia Mobsters: SOMEONE TO WATCH OVER HIM


Frank Sinatra appeared in Beverly Hills Municipal Court in 1947 after being arrested for slugging New York columnist Lee Mortimer, who alleged the singer may have had ties to a known mobster. Sinatra said the writer called him an ethnic epithet for Italian Americans. The incident took place at Ciro's nightclub in Hollywood..
The Mobster in question is Johnny Roselli

Sunday, November 16, 2008

Mob Hitman shot blanks


Mafia Hitman Frank "Bomp" Bompensiero was prolific with a pistol and shotgun--- but he shot blanks in bed. Bompensiero bore the brunt of many mob jokes because he was impotent. Mobster, Jimmy "The Weasel" Fratianno told Mafia Mobster, Anthony "the Animal" Fiato, "Bomp clipped plenty of bums, and "Bomps" cock was just as dead as they were"

Thursday, November 13, 2008

Hollywood and The Mob

Villa Capri














Patsy D'Amore's Villa Capri really rocked with Movie Stars as famous as Frank Sinatra and Robert Mitchum, and Mafia Mobster's, as Infamous as Sam Giancana and Johnny Roselli. Sinatra was part owner of the Villa Capri

Patsy D' Amore was the Godfather of restaurants . He was also an amico of Boston Mob boss Jerry Angiulo .
.

My family moved to Hollywood from the Little Italy section of Boston, called the North End .My father scored the job of head bartender in the Villa Capri through the Angiulo connection with Patsy

.It was in this restaurant that I met and hooked up with some of my mentors and cohorts
in the Mafia like Johnny Roselli, and "Dago Louie" Piscopo , and Mike Rizzitello..


Years later I moved in with Patsy's daughter. He must have turned over in his grave.
------- Anthony Fiato











Friday, November 7, 2008

Louie Dragna Hollywood Mafia

















Louis Tom Dragna aka Lou Allen aka "Louie longlegs" was at one time the acting boss of the Los Angeles crime family . He has an arrest record dating back to 1946. Louie Dragna was one of the top earners in the history of the LA mob. He made a ton of gelt in the garment business. Dragna participated in the murder of "Russian" Louie Strauss. He was convicted along with Mobster's,Joe "JS" Sica , Frankie Carbo, and Blinky Palermo , of extorting welterweight boxing champion Don Jordan's manager for a piece og Jordans contract . His last conviction came in 1980 when It came out in the Forex extortion Mafia trial that Louie Dragna admitted to his membership in the Mafia, and that he betrayed the membership structure of the Los Angeles mob to FBI agent Jack Barron in 1976

Thursday, November 6, 2008

Connolly convicted of second-degree murder



Connolly listened attentively to testimony earlier in the trial.
By Shelley Murphy, Globe Staff

MIAMI -- Retired FBI agent John J. Connolly Jr. was convicted today of second-degree murder for leaking information to long-time informants James "Whitey" Bulger and Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi that caused them to kill a potential witness against them 26 years ago.
The verdict, delivered by a Florida jury that deliberated for 13 hours following seven weeks of testimony, means that the 68-year-old Connolly could spend the rest of his life in prison.
It marks the complete fall from grace of the once-decorated agent who is already serving a 10-year prison term for his 2002 federal racketeering conviction for helping Bulger -- one of the FBI's 10 Most Wanted -- evade capture and protecting him from prosecution for years.
Connolly stared, expressionless, unblinking, as the verdict of the six-woman, six-man jury was announced just before 4 p.m.
Prosecutors said the conviction of second-degree murder with a firearm carried a sentence of between 30 years to life in prison. But the defense team said that they believed that Judge Stanford Blake had discretion to give Connolly a shorter sentence, because the murder occurred before a change in sentencing guidelines. Sentencing was set for Dec. 4.Jurors declined to comment as they left the building.Fred Wyshak, a federal prosecutor from Boston who assisted in the state prosecution, said, "Unless we catch Whitey Bulger, this ends what is really a sad chapter in the history of law enforcement in Boston."He added that there was nothing happy about the case. "Hopefully, this will never happen again. That was the point of this investigation, making sure this never happens again.''
After jurors left the courtroom and the judge left the bench, Connolly huddled with his lawyers, held his sister Sally's hand and hugged his brother James, a retired DEA agent.He declined to talk, saying he'd been advised not to by his lawyers."I think the jury reached a verdict of guilty because of all the uncharged bad acts that were introduced,'' said defense attorney Manuel L. Casabielle. "Obviously, some of the mud did stick.''
While convicting Connolly on one count, the jury found him not guilty of conspiracy to commit murder in the 1982 slaying in south Florida of John B. Callahan, a gregarious 45-year-old accountant who worked at some of Boston's largest accounting firms but had a fatal habit of socializing with gangsters.
Jurors apparently believed the testimony of the 74-year-old Flemmi, who is now serving a life sentence for 10 murders and testified that it was a tip from his handler, Connolly, that sealed Callahan's fate.
Facing his former handler from the witness stand, Flemmi testified that Connolly warned him and Bulger that the FBI planned to question Callahan and advised that he "wouldn't hold up'' and would likely implicate the gangsters in the 1981 slaying of a legitimate businessman, World Jai Alai president Roger Wheeler.
Hitman-turned-government witness John Martorano testified that at the urging of Bulger and Flemmi, he lured Callahan to Florida and shot him in the head. Callahan's bullet-riddled body was found in the trunk of his car at Miami International Airport on Aug. 2, 1982.
Though Connolly was only charged with Callahan's murder, prosecutors were allowed to present additional evidence dating back to the 1970s in an effort to prove that Connolly was corrupt.
Flemmi testified that Connolly, who grew up in the same South Boston housing project as Bulger, took $235,000 in payoffs from him and Bulger, and routinely leaked them information -- including tips that prompted them to kill Callahan, and two FBI informants, one in 1976 and one in 1982.
After Connolly took a $25,000 kickback in 1983 that he knew came from drug proceeds, he joked, "Hey, I'm one of the gang."
The defense called 20 witnesses, including US District Senior Judge Edward F. Harrington, who testified that Connolly had a reputation in the Boston FBI office for his ability to turn some of Boston's most dangerous criminals -- including Bulger and Flemmi -- into informants. He credited Connolly with using those informants to help the FBI decimate the New England Mafia in the 1980s.
The government called 21 witnesses during the trial. Jurors were given a stark view of Boston's underworld, FBI corruption, and murder.
The government's key witnesses were: Flemmi, Martorano, who is free after serving just 12 years for 20 murders; gangster-turned-author Kevin Weeks, who served five years for assisting Bulger in five murders; and John Morris, a former FBI supervisor who wept on the stand and admitted taking $7,000 in bribes from Bulger and Flemmi and leaking them information.
Callahan's widow, Mary, said the verdict has brought some welcome closure to herself and her two children."I know who and why after 26 years,'' said Mary Callahan, adding that the trial brought answers to all of her questions aabout her husband's murder. "Bulger is the worst thing that ever happened to Boston."Connolly "was good at his job until he got touched by Whitey," Mary Callahan said. "He chose to do the wrong thing and he's going to pay for it. Unfortunately, so will his family."
Casabielle said he thought the verdict was probably a compromise by jurors, who found Connolly not guilty of conspiracy to commit first-degree murder, and not guilty of first-degree murder, and instead unanimously found Connolly guilty of just one lesser charge.
He said Connolly, like the rest of the defense team, was distraught over the verdict, but believes he has many good issues on appeal.
As for whether the verdict clearly meant that jurors believed the testimony of the government's killer witnesses, Flemmi and Martorano, Casabielle frowned and rolled his eyes.
"I don't know what to make of it,'' Casabielle said. "I would be very sad if people believed Martorano or Flemmi. "Their lack of moral standards is so crystal clear. I don't know how anyone could believe them.''
Miami-Dade Assistant State Attorney Michael Von Zamft, who prosecuted the case with Wyshak, said Connolly's second-degree murder conviction means that jurors understood that "there was a total disregard for human life if he's giving out that information."
After the courtroom was cleared and reporters and a few bystanders were still milling around outside, Connolly, dressed in a red prison jumpsuit, shackles and handcuffs, was led down the hallway at 4:38 p.m, heading back to the local jail.



Friday, October 31, 2008

The Gangster Squad sets a trap for Mickey Cohen



Nicola “Nick” Licata, a former Detroit bootlegger reputed to be second in command in the L.A. Mafia, August 1951.Licata set up alibi for Fratianno








Detectives and reporters surround the car containing the bodies of the Two Tonys: Tony Trombino, 31, and Tony Brancato, 36, slain on Ogden Drive, half a block from Hollywood Boulevard. Both were shot through the back of the head, August 1951.


After the Two Tonys were shot dead and left slumped in their car in Hollywood, the LAPD prepared an internal report titled "GANGLAND KILLINGS, Los Angeles Area, 1900-1951."

The survey went back to when fruit peddlers fought over turf and the Black Hand shook them down for a cut of the action. Police were certain who committed the first gangland killing, in 1906, but "strong man" Joe Ardizzone was acquitted when "no witnesses . . . would talk." Ardizzone later made the list in a different capacity -- as a victim -- when he vanished in 1931 after leaving his Sunland vineyard to meet a cousin from Italy. No one was convicted in that case, either.

Even as the causes of underworld squabbles evolved over the decades -- from fruit carts to Prohibition liquor sales to control of illegal gambling -- there was one constant: how easy it was to get away with murder.

The "GANGLAND KILLINGS" report listed 57 over the first half of the 20th century. And one conviction. One. For the 1937 rub-out of Redondo Beach "gambling czar" Les Bruneman. And that case eventually unraveled.

What that left was half a century of gangland killings whose case summaries ended with "No prosecution" or the more optimistic "No prosecution to date." Time and again, there was no overcoming the underworld's code of silence, "omertà."

So it was with the Aug. 6, 1951, slaughter of the Two Tonys, a pair of losers from Kansas City who had raised the ire of the mob hierarchy by robbing the cash room at Las Vegas' Flamingo Hotel. "Wild-haired young bloods," Mickey Cohen called them.
Anthony Brancato and Anthony Trombino had been spotted meeting in L.A. with another Kansas City import, Jimmy "the Weasel" Fratianno. Hours later, Trombino was about to light a cigar in the front seat of his Oldsmobile, with Brancato beside him, when someone in the back blew their brains out, just off Hollywood Boulevard.

Jimmy the Weasel had an alibi, of course -- he'd spent the evening in Burbank, at a fish fry at the Five O'Clock Club owned by Nicola "Nick" Licata. After Licata and 12 others dutifully backed Fratianno's story, the cops tried to get a clerk at Schwab's drugstore to say that a stogie found at the murder scene was a brand that Jimmy the Weasel favored, but she said no, that was too cheap. He was a 70-cent-cigar man.

Thus did the double killing become another "No prosecution to date."

What you had to do, in Jack O'Mara's job, was settle for whatever small victories you could manufacture

That's why the Gangster Squad sergeant volunteered to bring in Licata after the Two Tonys hit.

O'Mara didn't expect a miracle -- there was no way a mob higher-up would turn on a loyal triggerman. But he gave a polite nod to Licata's wife, allowed the man time to get his things and arranged for Licata's son to visit him in the police lockup.
You had to wait for your opening, and for O'Mara it came the next time he showed up at the Licata home, part of yet another roust for a crime that would never be solved. By then, he was like family, the kindly cop, and Licata felt comfortable asking a favor: "Look, Mr. O'Mara, my wife she's a-fixin' me a nice chicken dinner. Before I go downtown. . . ."

'Hey Nick,' I say, 'Go ahead and eat. I'm in no hurry. Do you mind if I use your phone?'


The phone had a long cord so Licata could carry it into his private office. O'Mara carted it instead to the kitchen. Then he began to rummage, "looking," he said, "for anything I could steal."

That's how he stumbled upon paperwork from a wedding. The couple were Licata's son and the daughter of Black Bill Tocco, a Detroit Mafia boss who had a mansion with an 80-foot pool and knew how to stage a gala mob marriage. Many of the RSVPs had come back to the Licata home on Overland Drive.

I got the phone and I'm watching him from the kitchen and I'm pulling out drawers, you know, taking the wedding invitations, and I shove them in my trench coat, you know. I'm bulging with all these RSVPs . . . all the goddamn Mafia in the country, see."

You could call it petty theft -- O'Mara wouldn't argue. But other law enforcement agencies had to settle for camping outside that Detroit wedding with cameras and binoculars, trying to figure out who was emerging from the limos. In L.A., the Gangster Squad didn't have to rely on fuzzy photos to add names to files that now filled a wall of cabinets in City Hall


Small victories, that was their reality. Like when Mickey Cohen finally went on trial in 1951.

For years, Los Angeles officials had lobbied the federal government, all the way to President Truman, to use the legal strategy that nailed Al Capone -- a tax case -- against the showboating L.A. mobster. A grand jury eventually collected evidence of how Mickey had paid a decorator $49,329 for work on his Brentwood home, spent $800 on shoes and handed out $600 in tips at one lavish affair. They'd let him try to explain how he lived like that thanks to $300,000 in "loans," not income, from bookies and others. "If it's against the law to borrow dough," Mickey joked, "I'm guilty."

Thus did they get the guilty verdict they wanted -- and Mickey got a five-year sentence for tax evasion. Before they led him off, Mickey handed his wife a roll of bills and his jewelry, gave her a kiss and pledged to appeal. "Right now, though," he quipped, "I'm hungry."

Five years had passed since the Gangster Squad was formed with the streets as its office. Two of the original eight had retired, including the first field leader, Willie Burns. Soon after, two more originals were gone, dead, in fact -- one in a car accident, the other a suicide.

There were no guarantees in police work, or life, but O'Mara hoped he'd still be around, and on the squad, when Mickey got out of prison. He wanted to see if another of his small victories paid off.

This too involved his mole Hawkins. Well before Mickey went off on his federally sponsored vacation, the guard had smuggled seven handguns out of his Brentwood house. Not exactly smuggled -- at O'Mara's direction, the munitions expert had suggested to Mickey that his guns could use a checkup. Hawkins volunteered to take them into the wilderness to fire 'em, clean 'em and oil 'em. Mickey loved the idea.

But Hawkins did not take the guns to the desert. He took them to the police range in West L.A., where O'Mara was waiting with an LAPD lab technician. Not surprisingly, none of the weapons was registered to Mickey. They recorded the serial numbers and fired test bullets from each.

O'Mara screwed off the butt plates and scratched initials into each gun, putting his own, "JOM," in the first. Then he reattached the plates and Hawkins returned the cleaned guns to an appreciative Mickey.

At police headquarters, the list of hidden initials was locked in a safe in the office of the squad's boss, Capt. James Hamilton. Only Chief William H. Parker and a few others were let in on the trap they'd set for Mickey.

While he was in prison, one of his henchmen would keep his arsenal. When he got out, he'd no doubt retrieve the guns that now could be traced to him. "I figured they might be recovered from a body someday," O'Mara said.

If that happened, the LAPD might actually solve a gangland killing. It was a long shot, but some long shots pay off. O'Mara merely had to wait a decade, to the last days of the 1950s, to the night when Mickey and his crew sat waiting in Rondelli's restaurant for Jack "the Enforcer" Whalen, the homegrown hoodlum who'd found a special friend on the Gangster Squad.

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Hollywood Mafia Mobsters Hollywood Gangster Squad




If they joined the Gangster Squad, their targets would be the likes of Bugsy Siegel, the playboy refugee from New York's Murder Inc., and Jack Dragna, the Sicilian banana importer who quietly lorded over the city's rackets.

Then there was Mickey Cohen, the dapper former prizefighter who had come to town as Bugsy's muscle but soon had his own cafe on North La Brea and a "paint store" nearby with three phones to take bets. That's where he'd shot a produce broker whose family ran competing bookie joints. Mickey said the man came at him with a .45, the one found beside the body, and there were no witnesses to contradict his story. "It was me or him," Mickey said. "I let him have it."

There had been three more mob rub-outs around L.A. since then, including the shotgunning of two Chicago men outside a Hollywood apartment. That one generated a "Gangsters in Gambling War" headline that was a prime reason Police Chief C.B. Horrall wanted those 18 cops to see what a Thompson submachine gun looked like.


"You'll be working with these," Burns told them.


The deal was: If they signed on, they'd continue to belisted on the rosters of their old stations. They'd have no office, only two unmarked cars. They'd almost never make arrests. They'd simply gather "intelligence" and be available for other chores. In effect, they would not exist.

Burns gave them a week to ponder advice from an old lieutenant at the 77th, who said an assignment like that could get you in good with the chief. "Or you could end up down in San Pedro, walking a beat in a fog."

After the week, only seven came back, making a squad of eight, counting Burns.

"We did a lot of things that we'd get indicted for today," said Sgt. Jack O'Mara.





* * *


On the job a decade before J. Edgar Hoover's FBI acknowledged the existence of the Mafia, they took an anything-goes approach to making life hell for Mickey Cohen and driving other such characters from the Southern California sunshine.

They used a look-alike Pac Bell truck to plant bugs, to hell with warrants. They did secret favors for Jack Webb, who glorified the LAPD with his "Dragnet" TV show. They stole evidence from mobsters and neutralized a pesky newspaper columnist. And Jack O'Mara personally set a trap for the showboating Mickey, to prove he was a killer.

There were close calls -- grand jury investigations, lawsuits and a skeptical chief or two -- but they endured through the 1950s. That's when one of their cases changed the ground rules for policing in California and when one of their own -- Jerry Wooters, the most reckless of them all -- grew far too friendly with L.A.'s homegrown hoodlum, Jack "the Enforcer" Whalen.

But when "the Enforcer" made the mistake of confronting Mickey and his crew at a hangout in the Valley, a bullet between the eyes signaled that the Gangster Squad's time was over, and so was a defining era in the city's history.

Noir L.A. was a time and place where truth was not found in the sunlight, and justice not found in marble courthouses, and where not a single gangland killing was solved, not one, for half a century. Not on paper, anyway.


* * *
Their first assignment: the visitors shaking down Hollywood restaurants and nightclubs. "Hoodlum types from Rhode Island," in O'Mara's words, "what we called 'dandruff.' "

The fear of evil outsiders had been a refrain in L.A. before any of these cops were born. You could go back to 1891, when this was a community of 70,000 with a police force of 75, and hear Chief John Glass warn of "Eastern crooks" seeking warm weather and easy pickings. After the turn of the century, the invaders were upgraded to "Eastern gangsters," and in 1927 Det. Ed "Roughhouse" Brown became a local legend by escorting Al Capone to the train when the notorious mobster was discovered in a downtown hotel. "I thought you folks liked tourists," Capone said before returning to Chicago.

Now a new group of "tourists" was demanding 25% of the take at landmarks such as the Mocambo and Brown Derby, and the club owners did not want to go to court, worried what might happen to their families. A state crime report would warn anew of an "Invasion of Undesirables." "What are you gonna do?" O'Mara asked.


The view was great from the hills off Mulholland Drive. So why not escort these hoodlums up there and, as O'Mara put it, "have a little heart-to-heart talk with 'em, emphasize the fact that this wasn't New York, this wasn't Chicago, this wasn't Cleveland. And we leaned on 'em a little, you know what I mean? Up in the Hollywood Hills, off Coldwater Canyon, anywhere up there. And it's dark at night."

Amid that darkness, he would "put a kind of a gun to their ear and say, 'You want to sneeze?' "
That was O'Mara's signature, the gun in the ear and a few suggestive words: "Do you feel a sneeze coming on? A real loud sneeze?"


* * *



The squad members met on street corners or in parking lots. Their 1940 Fords had 200,000 miles on them and holes in the floorboard so they could pour fluid into the master cylinders. At times five men rode in one, and if several smoked cigars, their suits would stink so bad they'd hang them outdoors at night.


Their three Tommy guns came with 50-round drums and beautiful violin cases, but were a pain -- they couldn't leave them in the trunk and risk having them stolen. O'Mara slept with his under his bed.

When they did get an office, it was a cubbyhole in the decaying Central station, which had horse stalls from the 1880s.

It was tempting to see them as a wrecking crew, with several resembling another new team in town, the football Rams. Doug "Jumbo" Kennard stood 6-foot-4, Archie Case weighed 250 and Benny Williams was construction-strong -- one of the cops who built the Police Academy in their spare time.

But a team needed a quarterback or two, men tough and clever, like Burns, who'd been a gunnery officer during the war. Or Jack O'Mara.

Born in 1917, he spent his toddler years in Portland, Ore., until ice storms inspired his father to pile the family into a Model T and drive south. Jack landed at Manual Arts High, where he wasn't the speediest guy on the track team but never understood how anyone beat him. For fun, he boxed.

Not quite 135 pounds, he had to stuff himself with bananas and ice cream to make the weight for the LAPD, which needed men in the wake of its scandals of the 1930s, when a mayor and chief were caught selling promotions and a rogue squad planted a bomb under the car of a civic reformer. "It was a lousy, crooked department," said Max Solomon, Bugsy Siegel's attorney.

O'Mara became part of a generation that was supposed to change all that. At the academy, he foolishly kept racing the fastest man in the Class of 1940, Tom Bradley, the former UCLA track star and future mayor, though he had no chance of winning.

He worked patrol and traffic until Pearl Harbor, when the U.S. Coast Guard gave him an aptitude test and sent him to a cryptography unit in the Aleutian Islands, part of the effort to intercept Japanese communications and break their code. Who knew he had brains? When he returned, he was a pipe-smoking, 165-pound Spencer Tracy look-alike, and just the sort Burns wanted for his hush-hush unit.

Other cops suspected they were internal spies, headhunters, a rumor that started when a beat officer confided to the chief's office that a bookmaking barber was inviting cops to "get on the take." The squad caravaned to the barbershop, "ripped everything, kicked all the walls out," O'Mara said, and shaved the guy's head with his own razors.

Pleased, the brass gave them more muscle: 6-foot-5 Jerry Greeley and Lindo "Jaco" Giacopuzzi, a 230-pound former all-Valley football lineman who had built himself up carting milk cans at his family's dairy. When that pair got a Tommy gun, they showed they understood the rules of this gig -- that there were none in dealing with Mickey Cohen and his ilk. Asked to stake out the clothing store Mickey had opened, they decided to leave his crew guessing whether they were cops or out-of-town hoods.

They took the plates off their unmarked car and found others -- from Illinois -- in the trash at the DMV, then parked up the block from Mickey's place. One of Mickey's men went out to investigate and "every time he'd pass by us, we'd put our coat up and pull our hat down," Giacopuzzi recalled. "So when we left, I was driving, and all the men in Mickey's establishment there came out on the sidewalk . . . and I took the car and I swerved it . . . and Greeley leaned way out of the window with the Tommy gun. And you should have seen them hit the deck."

It was a great prank to share with the squad, the fake drive-by, and maybe they wouldn't have done it later, after someone -- not faking -- came by Mickey's haberdashery on the Sunset Strip with a shotgun. That was no laughing matter, the dead body that marked the start of the Sunset Wars





* * *


The squad made news for the first time on Nov. 15, 1947, with a report that Willie Burns and O'Mara had led a "flying detachment" that rousted six Midwesterners on Wilshire in a limo with New York plates. The six were booked on suspicion of robbery, though there was no evidence they had yet committed any crime in Los Angeles. Photographers were invited into the Wilshire station to snap them seated on a bench, several with bowed heads. Then four were escorted to the county border.

Of course, no one knew then what would become of the two men who were allowed to stay on promises of good behavior. Who could have guessed that James Fratianno, an ex-con "used-car salesman" from Cleveland, would become infamous as Jimmy the Weasel, the L.A. mob's most prolific hit man? Who could have guessed that James Regace would rise to head that mob three decades later, under his real name, Dominic Brooklier?


What mattered at the time was that the squad had sent some suspicious characters packing and thus sent a signal to the civilian populace and to Mickey et al. That second audience did get the message -- the bug in Mickey's Brentwood home made that clear.

His right-hand man, Neddie Herbert, was overheard the day after the roust, saying: "I can't meet you at the Mocambo, I'm afraid they'll pick me up." At 3:30 a.m., he updated Mickey: "Somebody else got picked up. Jesus Christ. I'm getting out of this. I want to live to be a grandfather


"They can't make anybody leave town," Mickey said. "It's against the Constitution."

The Gangster Squad could not take credit for that eavesdropping, or be blamed when it turned into a fiasco. The squad was still getting organized when vice detectives leaped at an opening provided by Mickey's renovation of a ranch house on Moreno Drive. Five posed as construction workers, when the real ones took off, and hid a microphone between the wood bin and the fireplace.

The bug was set by the time Mickey and Lavonne Cohen moved in, and soon was picking up barking by Tuffy, their bulldog. The vice team's mistake was hiring a private bugging expert, because he secretly ran a second line to his own listening post. For a year it gave him -- along with the LAPD -- a window into what Mickey was up to: talking about fixing charity boxing matches, telling someone back East that "we need a shotgun in the outfit," grumbling about greedy cops who "grab it and tear your arm off" when you offer them "a gift."


But the bug picked up nothing of note on June 20, 1947, when Bugsy Siegel was shot through the eye while reading the Los Angeles Times in his living room a few miles east. Mickey kept mum about Bugsy's demise, which left him and Jack Dragna to fight for control of local gambling.

Mickey's crew did complain about the leader of the Gangster Squad, Willie Burns, and how some cops were harassing customers at his haberdashery. "It's ridiculous," Mickey said. "Anybody who they see leave the store they take right downtown." Not long after, Burns' wife received flowers at home, a funeral arrangement.


* * *

* * *
Some hoodlums understand the wisdom of anonymity, but the 5-foot-5 Mickey was the opposite breed, like Capone, or later John Gotti. Mickey cultivated his image as a "dese, dem and dose" sort who worked his way up to monogrammed silk pajamas.

He could claim to be a local boy too, for while he was Brooklyn-born, as Meyer Harris Cohen, his mother moved west to Boyle Heights, where he got a paperboy's education in the streets and began boxing with a Star of David on his trunks. He moved East to compete as a top featherweight and settled in Cleveland and Chicago, where he met the Capones and segued into "rooting," his term for "sticking up joints."

Now Mickey sped between nightspots in an entourage of Cadillacs and boasted that he wore suits just twice, then sold them at his store. He made no secret of his hand-washing mania, either, cleaning them constantly for fear that germs, not bullets, would get him.

But he was no joke -- a commission appointed by Gov. Earl Warren estimated that "the Cohen gang" had 500 bookies under its wing, with Mickey demanding $40 a week for each telephone in return for his protection. And although the LAPD once was the place to secure that protection, by 1947 he found it easier to do business in some of the county's other 46 law enforcement jurisdictions, especially Burbank, whose police chief soon was able to buy a 56-foot yacht, largely with cash.

Yet it wasn't easy to get the goods on Mickey, for he'd say one instant that a gambling joint was worth "over half a million," then lament that he still owed $45,000 on his house and, oh yeah, "I haven't booked a horse in four years."

Later, Mickey insisted he knew all along the cops had "a bug in my rug" and that's why he dished them so much nonsense. But he seems to have learned of the bug by chance, when his gardener plunged a shovel through an underground wire. Mickey had his property swept and found the mike by the wood box.

Soon after, he obtained partial transcripts of his conversations, 126 pages of notes that the private bug man apparently had taken and now was selling along the Sunset Strip. The San Francisco Chronicle and the L.A. Times got them too, generating "Cohen's Secrets" and "Cohen's Big Deals" headlines . . . and questions about why the man still walked free if authorities had all that dirt on him.

That's why the Gangster Squad had its own bug man.


* * *
From an Iowa farm family that came west in a covered wagon, Con Keeler had grown up tinkering with radios and could cobble together crude bugs using telephone and hearing aid parts. He also knew Navy intelligence officers who were developing eavesdropping systems that did not require long, telltale wires -- a welcome innovation given that Mickey would be looking for wires.

In this system, the mike was connected to a transmitter that sent signals you could pick up blocks away. The downside was that you had to hide a six-pack of batteries with the transmitter and replace them every week. But the first challenge was planting the equipment.

That was especially daunting at Mickey's house because someone -- probably Dragna -- had exploded dynamite under it. Mickey now had round-the-clock guards, swinging searchlights and an armored front door with a porthole window

The answer? A diversion. As soon as Mickey and Lavonne went out one night, two squad members began digging noisily in a nearby lot. When Mickey's guards went to have a look, Keeler climbed a fence and crept though an orange grove behind the house. He had burlap over his shoes to silence his footsteps and ammonia on his clothes to drive off dogs.

The bombing had left splintered openings under the house, and Keeler was able to slide one bug inside a closet where Mickey stacked dozens of pairs of shoes. Then he crept out through the orchard and past the home of an English physician who had worked for British intelligence in the war and was letting them use his garage as a listening post.

But they hadn't counted on what their bugging would do to Mickey's TV. At a time when only 10 million Americans had sets, he had the fanciest sold by W&J Sloane department store, with a "distinguished mahogany" cabinet and 45 tubes to guarantee clear reception. Now they overheard him ranting about the screwy lines on Channel 2.

Listening from the doctor's garage, the squad knew what was up -- their transmission was too close to the lowest frequency picked up by a TV. Mickey was likely to figure it out also.

"We could hear him call up and raise hell with W&J Sloane company. 'Take this goddamn thing out of here or come out and have somebody fix it!' " O'Mara recalled. "Sure enough, they sent a technician out."

O'Mara had an idea -- intercept the repair truck. "Pulled him over, talked to him. He was scared, but he agreed. 'I'd like you to take a man,' I said."

Mickey wanted service? He'd get two men fiddling with the back of his set. "While we're in, we put in another bug. Right in his TV. And the batteries to run the damn bug."

This one used a slightly different frequency that would not put annoying oscillations on Channel 2.

Mickey said, 'Fine, well, fine, thank you, guys' and gave 'em 25 bucks apiece for a tip, you know. Well, my guy takes Mickey aside and says, 'Lookit, I'll be back in here once a week and take care of it. You know, there's a lot of bugs in televisions and stuff you have to work out

Mickey had to think his lavish tips were why the repairman was so eager to get into his TV every week.

OK, so the bug couldn't hear much when Mickey's TV was on, and it was on all the time. But O'Mara sensed that their mission might be measured by small victories, and it was a small victory , for sure, to be able to say, a half-century later . . . and that's how Mickey Cohen wound up paying for his own bugging.


I spent the whole day with Mobster, Jimmy Fratianno in 1990
and Jimmy told me how he paid these coppers off to lose
the tail they had on him. Anthony Fiato





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Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Los Angeles crime 'Dragnet' LAPD









'Dragnet' tales drawn from LAPD files burnished the department's image
Jack Webb mirrored Chief William H. Parker's militaristic style and contempt for suspects' rights.
By Paul Lieberman
October 30, 2008

Jack Webb was not yet 30 when he came up with the radio show "Dragnet" in 1949. Two years later, he brought it to the fledgling medium of TV, with its memorable dum-da-dum-dum music and opening: "The story you are about to see is true. Only the names have been changed to protect the innocent." The stories weretrue, too, for Chief William H. Parker readily shared files with a booster whose portrayal of "Just the facts, ma'am" cops was one of two ways the country was sold a new image of the LAPD.

The other was Parker's own militaristic style that emphasized crackdowns on "vice and corruption" both on the streets and within the ranks, all to promote "a moral and spiritual rebirth" of the nation.


Webb's TV series drew on all corners of the Los Angeles Police Department, but when he made a movie version in 1954, he set it in the Intelligence Division, a.k.a. the Gangster Squad. In fact, he re-created its offices down to the spittoon.

The plot had Sgt. Joe Friday trying to solve the killing of a mob figure with the help of an informant or two, a bug or two and lectures about the unfair justice system. "Why does the law always work for the guilty?" Friday asks when the hoods come before a grand jury with their rights -- "I refuse to testify . . ." -- written on slips of paper. What's more, a female grand juror gives him a hard time on whether officers should be allowed to tap phones. "How do we know that all you policemen wouldn't be running around listening to all our conversations?" she asks.

"We would if you talked murder," Friday shoots back.


A film critic might say the big-screen "Dragnet" suffered from stylistic schizophrenia, mixing Webb's poker-faced earnestness with traces of film noir, with its rainy streets, dark interiors and elusive reality. Friday and his partner are even denied the privilege of arresting the hit man -- he dies on them, of gastric cancer, a touch inspired by the L.A. mob's Jimmy "the Weasel" Fratianno, who complained of a "hot gut."

But you had to be an insider to know that -- or how some names in the film were not invented. The real-life Capt. James Hamilton was a major character, played by craggy-faced Richard Boone, and the minor ones included a Sgt. Keeler, after Con Keeler, the squad's original bug man.

A newer bug man also got a plug: "Can Phelps meet us out there with playback equipment?" That was for electronics whiz Bert Phelps, who once turned alarm equipment from a firehouse into a device to monitor a bookie's phones. Phelps also got termite training to provide a cover for crawling under buildings. No wonder the CIA kept trying to hire him.

Phelps got a charge out of being in Webb's movie, naturally, but it also left him uneasy. For he knew the back story -- what the Santa Monica-born actor was rewarding them for.

Webb's marriage to singer Julie London had gone the way of many in Hollywood, leaving him worried how she would pursue his riches. Webb asked Capt. Hamilton if one of his bugging experts could meet him and a private investigator at their home while she was away. The P.I. "was gonna put the wire in, and they wanted my advice," Phelps recalled. "I said: 'Whatever the captain wants me to do, OK.' So thereafter, it did happen. He got evidence he wanted."

The lines were fuzzy in their world, but to Phelps this was a leap away from eavesdropping on Mickey Cohen. It amazed him how his LAPD bosses were so "sanctimonious" in public while secretly helping a Hollywood big shot bug his wife.

Then again, maybe they knew what they were doing by aiding Webb, for he came through for them again after the California Supreme Court, in a Gangster Squad case, issued its landmark ruling that illegally obtained evidence could no longer be used in court.

Parker went berserk over the decision, calling it "a situation long sought by the masters in the Kremlin." Both he and Webb went to Sacramento to plead with legislators to untie the hands of police. Webb's tool of persuasion? His film pointing out the idiocy of giving criminals all those rights.


paul.lieberman@latimes.com

Bottom line, Webb used the coppers to spy on his wife






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Tuesday, October 28, 2008

Brady gets jailed with pal hop head



Scott Brady (real name Gerald Kenneth Tierney), and his pal Slattery were arrested at 8929 Hollywood Hills Road in a major LAPD raid in which four officers, acting on a tip that drug parties were being held at the home, recovered: the butt of a marijuana cigarette and, yes, a single joint.
Aside from the humorous situation of Sgt. Marty Brennan from the movie "He Walked by Night" being busted for drugs, there's a serious point here and not just the relatively minuscule amount of drugs, compared to today's arrests.

The district attorney's office dropped the case because it would reveal the identify of one of the narcotics details' "most reliable informants," "All I can say is a woman is the cause of it all," Slattery mourned, according to The Times. "You can't shake down every woman who comes into your place."

OK, here's how it went down. Promise not to laugh:

Brady "invited two girls up to blast some tea and get high," Sgt. John E. O'Grady said. (Right daddy-O. Let's throw on some hip platters and groove to Kerouac. He is a real gone cat).

Slattery said neither he nor Brady knew the women, but that one of them called and arranged for Brady to meet them in Hollywood.

Brady came home with a blonde and a Eurasian. When Slattery went into the kitchen, he found the blonde jiggling the shutters as if she were signaling police.

"They came in like the Russian army," Slattery said despite Brady's warning against "talking too much," The Times said.

Police rejected the men's allegations implicating the women. "The girls had nothing to do with the narcotics charge," O'Grady said. "They were brought there by Scott Brady from someplace in Hollywood. We released them after we were perfectly satisfied that they had nothing to do with the narcotics charge."

In December, however, an officer told prosecutors that to "disclose the identity of the two women would be to unmask one of his most reliable informants." The officer said he could not do that "in good conscience," The Times reported.

In other words, police got complaints that Brady and Slattery were throwing drug parties at the house. They had an informant contact the men, go to the home, get the men to smoke some dope and signal the police. The cops release the women and bust the men.

The rub is, my friend Mobster, Johnny Roselli had produced the movie "HE Walked By Night" and he had hand picked Scott Brady for the part . Johnny gave Brady the " brush off "
Another True Hollywood Story Anthony Fiato .

Sunday, October 26, 2008

Whitey Bulger



Infamous Mobster, Whitey Bulger of the Winter Hill Mob had a gay one night stand with Hollywood actor Sal Mineo. Mineo was known for his Academy Award nominated performace opposite James Dean in Rebel Without a Cause. Bulger killed plenty of people with guns, but he shot Sal with cupids arrow right in the ass..



.

Tuesday, October 21, 2008

Louie "The Couch" Gelfuso


Louie "the Couch" Gelfuso was a Capo in the Milano Crime Family. He was nicknamed "Louie The Couch" by FBI agent's who were listening to the planted bug in his broken-down-dump he called an apartment.


Gelfuso was always laying down on his couch while he was watching soap opera's like an old scrub woman. He would talk to the soap show characters, and he would even cry at some of the sentimental scenes.

"Louie The Couch" damn near had the Feds pissing in their pants with laughter, when he said to a soap character -- who was claiming she was a virgin, " you fucki'n douche bag , your cherry is so far up your ass, you can use it for a tailgate".

Another True Hollywood Story Anthony "The Animal" Fiato

Monday, October 20, 2008

Feds throw connolly under the bus




Joe Pistone aka Donnie Brasco, was an FBI agent who worked undercover for six years as an associate of the Bonanno Crime Family. He also helped FBI agent.Zip Connoly with -Mob-informants, Whitey Bulger, and Stevie Flemmi.. Pistone had met and talked to Flemmi and Bulger at a social dinner with Connolly at another FBI agents home in a Boston suburb .

After Connolly was convicted of federal racketeering charges in 2002, Pistone wrote a glowing letter to the sentencing judge urging leniency for .John Connolly,saying, ” he should never have been singled out to take the hit for the admitted flawed policies of a government that benefited from his skills, courage and dedication . I thought that was a cool thing to do.

Pistone must have caught some flack from the feds because now Pistone came up with some lame excuse for not testifying for the defense at Zip’s Conspiracy to Murder trial.. Pistone claims he can’t, and won’t testify without wearing a disguise, which the judge won”t allow. This guy has had his puss shown on TV almost as much as Barack Obama. In my opinion, Pistone is keeping his big trap shut to stay golden with Uncle.Sam. I met Pistone doing a show in the late eighties We compared war stories about what it was like wearing a wire According to Pistone. his wire had malfunctioned many times, which made me wonder if he ever really put it on in dangerous situations, or did he just claim to his superiors that it didn’t work when the going got hairy and scary. I busted his balls about it for a few laughs.

I had flipped to informant and wore a wire on many of the Boston mob . . Something Flemmi and Bulger never really had to do, or they were to scared to do. Connolly’s goose is going to be cooked because of the raw deal he is getting from the deaf, dumb. and blind agents who have thown him under the bus. Pistone should believe his own glowing letter, and have the balls to testify for Zip Connolly . Man up Joe !!! .
Anthony “The Animal” Fiato

Friday, October 17, 2008

Los Angeles Crime Family Hoods get clock cleaned



Frank "Puggy" Sica was the hoodlum brother of big time Los Angeles racketeer, Joe "JS" Sica . Frank was a pint sized punk,with a big chip on his shoulder. He was nothing like his older brother, JS, who was well connected and respected by Mafia figures all over the country. Puggy Sica and Sal Di Giovanni were burglars in the Sica gang. They both got their clock cleaned by a bartender who first shot at them, and then beat the fuck out them both for punching and kicking a woman to the floor in a Hollywood gin mill.. The woman was Sal the Creep's girlfriend... Sal got beat so bad he looked like a racoon because he got two black eyes.. .Frank Sica had been arrested plenty of times, but my old lawyer Eddie "the Fixer" Gritz kept him out of the pokey.. .When I was an enforcer for JS, I hated seeing this little drunken fuck.... Anthony Fiato

..Another true Hollywood story

Monday, October 13, 2008

Anthony Fiato, aka "The Animal", made Murry "the K" DJ

Murray the K, was a famous and influential rock and roll impresario and disc jockey of the 1950's, '60's and '70's. During the early days of Beatle mania, he frequently referred to himself as "the Fifth Beatle, Murray loved to gamble on sports.

He lost a ton of bucks gambling... One weekend he lost over thirty grand betting on football to a bookie named John Di Mattia. Di Mattia was my partner, or with me, as we say in the Mob.. when Murray The "K" came up lame for the dough I took a ride with Di Mattia to Murray's Hollywood Hills home to make him pay, and to meet a guy who was a living legend.

.The "K" looked as skinny as a rail.. I guess it was from doing cocaine.. I had to slap him around. a bit to make myself very clear about how I was going to hurt him bad if we didn't get our money.. The poor prick was shaking like deputy Barney Fife. In the midst of all this ,the crazy fuck asks me if I want a line a coke. Then and there, I knew how we were going to get paid.. I came up with a plan to get the money.. The "K" was heavy into cocaine, so I made him set up a dealer friend of his to be ripped off .by two members of my crew, my brother Larry, and Stevie Munichello..

.I gave the K the money to buy the first ounce ,and a week later this dealer named Tony comes with a key and they stick this fuck up.. This mutt accuses the" K" , but he isn't sure. The K calls me and I tell him to make a meet with this dealer. . I meet this Tony guy, and he has a couple of friends with him, one was someone who knew me,a mug named Mike Lizst, who was a dealer friend of actor Jimmy Caan's Mike's eyes bugged out of his head when he saw me, and he tells this guy Tony I was a Mafia.heavyweigh.t The Tony guy wants to be my friend now, and he wound up working for me, and he set up his supplier for half of the score A few years later the "K" died of cancer.. I did like the skinny prick, and he was a great DJ, but a lousy gambler. .
Anthony "The Animal" Fiato. . ..Another True Hollywood Story.





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Thursday, October 9, 2008

MAFIA KILLER LIVED LIKE A KING IN JAIL


Ronnie "The Pig" Casesso.

When I first met Ronnie Casesso he was in Walpole prison courtesy of the snitch Joe Barboza..... Casesso was a made guy in the Patriarca Crime Family who had gotten the death penalty for being one of the shooters in the murder of a minor hood named Teddy Deegan.. Ronnie "The Pig" caught a big break when his sentence was reduced to life in prison because the death penalty was repealed.

Casesso had the run of Walpole in those days. Here's how strong Casesso was. My friend Ronnie Rome was related to Casesso through marriage. He was also in the vending business with mob boss, Jerry Angiulo. Rome gets a call from Casesso.who tells him to bring a pin ball machine to Walpole for the warden as a gift. I decided to take a ride with Ronnie Rome. When we get there I expect to be frisked by the guards, but its not that way. Then I see Casesso really has the run of the place. He's in for murder, and not only is he not behind bars, he's not even inside the prison. He's lying on the grass working on his tan outside of the front gate. "The Pig" is acting more like the warden's brother-in-law, than a prisoner.
. . ..

We greet and I see how informed "The Pig" is. He is really happy to see Ronnie Rome. Rome tells him I was with Nicky Giso.( Nicky was a Patriarca made guy),but Casesso had already heard. He had better news sources than the Boston Globe. He offered us a drink. For a guy in prison,he was a gracious host.

We asked him how some of the guys from our neighborhood were doing. Casesso said," you just missed "The Bear", (Jimmy Flemmi, the brother of Stevie Flemmi)' he was just here getting a tan,''we are going to eat good tonight,'Chinese food, 'in a swell joint down the street".I couldn't believe it. "The Pig"
was living better than most guys on the outside. He laid woman in a motel down the road, and he even stayed overnight. He dropped in on the warden anytime he wanted anything. He was more free than the guards.

Everybody was afraid of "The Pig". They all knew he was Raymond Patriarca's buttonman.and he had killed plenty of times. When we were leaving he told us to watch out for "those people", meaning The Patriarca Crime Family, " they will use you". I laughed, and told Casseso to get my cell ready. Ronnie "The Pig" Casesso died in prison, but he lived like he was as free as a bird.

By Anthony Fiato,"The Animal"
..






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Tuesday, October 7, 2008

Barboza Hit


My mentor's in the Mafia always told me,” when it came to payback, no matter how long it takes,

Just like the “turtle”, we always get there”. Nothing illustrates this boast better than the

execution of Joe "The Animal" Barboza, courtesy of my good friend, and Mafia Cohort,. JR Russo--Anthony Fiato





In 1954 with the backing of New York crime lord Vito Genovese, Raymond Patriarca took control of

the New England mafia.. It became known as the Patriarca crime family. Possessing the same traits as his pal Vito; cunning and violence, Patriarca dominated the rackets in his territory with a vengeance from his headquarters in Providence R I . In a world where tough guys only listen to tougher guys, Patriarca was the undisputed boss. The most lucrative rackets were in Boston where Patriarca skipper, Gennaro “Jerry“. Angiulo, and his” North End” gang, locked down all the rackets in the Boston underworld. Anybody operating in numbers,. bookmaking,, loan sharking ,,and any other criminal racket that turned a buck had to go through Angiulo and pay for “permission” to operate. . Without “permission” you needed protection from Angiulo’s enforcers…All the men that kicked into Angiulo were referred to as "connected" guys, meaning they had the protection of the Patriarca family.. If you bothered a “connected” guy you were defying Raymond Patriarca and that was lethal.



For Joe Barboza killing came as easy as breathing. In the early sixties Dodge City atmosphere of the Boston underworld, when it came to murder, the thirty year old Portuguese hit man was the top slugger in the city.. Barboza and his pals Chico Amico and Nicky Femmia operated a leg breaking and gun- for-hire business out of East Boston. Always the thinker, Jerry Angiulo used Barboza to go into certain nightclubs throughout the Boston area and bust them up. The owners of these places were terrified, and immediately reached out to Angiulo to get rid of their Barboza problem. And, Angiulo did, for part ownership in the clubs.. .In the mob we call this create and alleviate.. Barboza so impressed Angiulo’s bosses Patriarca, and Henry Tomeleo, that they started using Barboza and his crew for all the hardcore enforcing that was bringing “heat” to Angiulo’s men.. In exchange Patriarca let Barboza operate in the rackets without paying tribute



The head of the “Winter hill” mob, Buddy McLean, was well liked by Patriarca..The baby faced Irish mobster's gang dominated all the Irish mobs. McLean brought big money deals from race fixing; to high jacking , to his pal Patriarca.. Patriarca made so much money from brokering these deals that he let McLean operate without the standard tribute .



McLean’s Winter Hill gang was the most powerful of all the Irish mobs . In the “South End,” the Harlem section of Boston, you had the Bennet brothers, a faction of the winter hill mob whose enforcers included Frank Salemme and the Flemmi brothers Stevie, and Vinny "The Bear" , who were all friendly with Joe Barboza-- and they were jockeying for a position with Patriarca ‘s most murderous Capo, Larry Bione. George McLaughlin broke away from Mclean and started a renegade faction of his own, and started a war in the Boston Underworld that included holding up the Italian mob’s card games, and shaking down their bookies..



This threw a monkey wrench into the Patriarca money machine so he gave Barboza and his crew marching orders to wipe out the McLaughlin gang under the tutelage of Bione. True to his rep, Barboza and company whacked out over twenty men to restore order for the Patriarca family.. Raymond avoided the heat but Barboza was hotter than a firecracker and he was being tailed by tons of law wherever he went. The cops busted an armed Barboza, and he was held on fifty grand bail.. Joe sent his crew of killers to shake down the Patriarca mob for bail money figuring he had it coming for all the” work” he had done for them. Raymond didn't take kindly to a hothead threatening him, so he had all of Barboza’s crew whacked out...

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Joe then turned rat, and with his treacherous testimony. he put Raymond and some of his capo’s in jail, some of them for life.. In spite of the hundred thousand dollar bounty Patriarca had put on his head, Barboza managed to elude Raymond’s vengeance for almost eight years, until his luck ran out on the streets of San Francisco. Acting on a tip, and some help from the L.A.Mob, my friend, and Patriarca soldier, JR Russo,.blasted Barboza to bits with a shotgun from the back of a white van, hitting him with five bullets while he was leaving an apartment.. Some say Barboza barked, “YOU FUCKERS”, then he died like a dog... JR was upped to the rank of Capo for the hit..... By Anthony Fiato .. .

Monday, September 29, 2008

MOB MOUTHPIECE


Hollywood Attorney, Eddie "The Fixer" Gritz was Mobster, Mickey Cohen's mouthpiece .Gritz greased the palm's of plenty of prosecutors and LAPD detectives. .Even Jack Dragna used Gritz when any member
of his mob got in a jam . A young Anthony Fiato saw how fast Gritz squashed a beef... Fiato heisted a liquor store and got caught cold by two cops with a bag of cash , and a gun in his hand.. Fiato's father reached out to a Mickey Cohen associate named Harry Diamond, who then got Gritz to give a pound of C-notes to the on-the-take Robbery-Homicide-detectives working the case.. .They dropped the case for lack of evidence
Another True Hollywood Story.

Thursday, September 25, 2008

DIAL "M" FOR MURDER


In the mob the best time to whack out a guy is when he least's expects it . Like when he is putting coins in a phone slot in a phone booth If he could, Frankie Bompansiero would tell you this rings true.

Mobster Tommy Ricciardi came west to LA to collect a debt for the Providence Mob . Ricciardi needed to clear the collection with the LA mob so he reached out to Mobster, Jack Lo Cicero, who then made a meet with Capo, Mike Rizzitello..Eventually Rizzitello wound up using Tommy in a shakedown that turned out to be an FBI sting operation named Forex.

.Mobster, Frank Bompensiero had endorsed the Feds Forex scheme to L. A mob members and was branded a rat that had to be exterminated. ..Mobster Jimmy 'The Weasel" Fratianno knew Bomp's habit was to make his nightly calls from a phone booth near his home so he set "Bomp" up for a slugger to whack him out.

While standing in a phone booth , talking to his pal Jimmy Fratianno, Frankie Bomps was pumped full of lead from a 22 caliber automatic with a silencer attached to it. The gun was held in the hand of Hitman, Tommy Ricciardi--who sped away in a car driven by Mobster Jack LoCicero

Thursday, September 18, 2008

GALLO GANG HITS HOLLYWOOD




Pete the Greek Diapoulas was Mobster, Joey Gallo's bodyguard . . Pete was sitting with "Crazy Joey" when he was shot to shreds in Umberto's Clam House. Years later the Greek was doing a show with Mafia Mobster's , Jimmy Fratianno ,and Anthony Fiato. . While sitting in the green room, Pete had Fratianno and Fiato busting-a-gut with a Gallo Gang story .. Seems.the gang was shaking down a restaurant up in the Bronx, and the stubborn owner wouldn't play ball with the bad guys from Brooklyn..".Crazy Joey" had the Greek get a dozen hamsters and dye them all black so they looked like rats.. Gallo sent three gang members into the joint during the dinner hour and turned the so-called rats loose in the place. Women screamed, and jumped up on the tables , waiters dropped their trays, others chocked on their food, the place was a mad house. .The next day the hump paid Joey to get rid of his rat problem.. .. When the Greek left to take a leak , Fratianno said to Fiato, " anyone who hires this fuck'en bum for a bodyguard , 'is committing suicide."..

Another true Hollywood Story. Anthony Fiato

Friday, September 5, 2008

Anthony Fiato aka "The Animal", Guido "The Bull" Penosi,



Although his Mob bosses were based in the Big Apple, Gambino-made-mobster, Guido "The Bull" Penosi preferred running his mob business from Mirabelle's restaurant, located on Hollywood's, Sunset Strip..


.. Penosi operated low-key and lone-wolf-like -- while he brokered big-league drug deals.extorted entertainers, and committed countless other crimes. FBI agent's accurately pegged Penosi as, "a man who got things done".


. The "Bull" was a cash-cow for his east coast Capo's, but he had never given as much as a crumb to the Los Angeles Crime Family-- until he cut Pete Milano's Street boss Anthony " The Animal " Fiato , in for a big piece of his "sky-is-the-limit" poker game located in a ritzy Sunset Strip high-rise .As Mafia boss Pete Milano was counting his end from the poker game an F.B.I.bug picked up Milano praising Fiato to capo Louie Gelfuso saying , " finally someone knows how to get things done the right way in this Family, Anthony is worth Ten men "

Saturday, August 30, 2008

DENISE HAD IT BAD FOR GOODFELLA


Top Mafia Mobster, Anthony Fiato and his vicious crew were the enforcing arm of the Los Angeles Mafia.. Fiato was a reputed hit man, and feared for his feral ferocity. . That's why the cadre of coppers, and pissed-off prosecutor's--- who were working the O.J Simpson case were .shrugging their shoulders , shaking their heads , and rolling their eyes , when they heard the hot-off-the-wire news that Nicole Browns' sister , Denise Brown , was shacked up with a Mobster in Boston's Coply Plaza Hotel .
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The mind boggled bunch just couldn't figure out how Denise could be attracted to such a scary guy.. Fiato would tell you it wasn't witch craft, but just plain old animal attraction that drew Denise to him. . Fiato had just finished his stint on the stand as the key witness in a Murder-for-hire trial when he walked into the same witness room where Denise and her gal pal Betsy were talking.

Not so bash-full Betsy said to Fiato "you look like your name is Vinnie, or some Italian name, by the way you dress, all mob guys wear silk Armani suits like yours." .. Fiato chimed back," the way you dress honey, " you look like you work for Heidi Fleiss". Denise laughed.for the first time in a month of Sunday's. .. Anthony Fiato's' rugged looks, and teasing way of talking -- sealed the deal for Denise.. . .While appearing on the Howard Stern show, Howard asked Fiato to sum up his relationship with Denise. Fiato told Howard ," Denise was high maintenance", "I just gave her a tune-up" , every once in a while..".

Friday, August 29, 2008

BROKEN DOWN MOB SLOB




Carmen "Flipper" Milano was a balding pot bellied slob. He looked more like a down-at-the-heel hobo than a high-level Mafia member. He was dead broke,- and just disbarred from a dismal law practice.-- when he got the not-so -bright idea to tie up with his older brother Pete -- who was the new boss of the L. A..Mafia . Pete slipped Flipper into the second slot as his Under boss --which in the L.A.mob , was the equivalent to slipping into the second spot in a soup line... Pete used Flipper as a go-between, him, and other Mafiosi .. Flipper became the target of all the heat meant for Pete. , Flipper's mob career mirrored his calamitous career in law. The FBI busted a gut when they picked up Flipper on a wire tap mooching a double saw-buck off of another crumb-bum, Capo, Louie Gelfuso , who was broker than he was









Another true Hollywood Story






Flipper Milano is mentioned in Anthony Fiato's book " The Animal In Hollywood "
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