Friday, May 21, 2010

Montreal Mafia figure presumed kidnapped



A Montreal Mafia player closely linked to the Rizzuto clan is believed to have been kidnapped after his car was found abandoned and unlocked with open windows.

Paolo Renda, 70, was last seen Thursday afternoon in Montreal's northwest Cartierville district in his car while running errands.

His wife Maria grew worried as the afternoon grew late and Renda didn't come home. She went to look for him, retracing his regular route along Gouin Boulevard.

She later told police she spotted Renda's Infiniti model sedan parked on the road near Albert-Prévost Avenue. The car was unlocked, with its windows rolled down and keys in the ignition. The family decided to call police around 6 p.m.

Investigators say preliminary evidence suggests Renda was kidnapped, but did not shed light on any possible motive.

Former crime reporter Michel Auger said it's difficult to guess what happened to Renda, but ransom kidnappings have targeted various members of the Montreal Mafia in recent years. What's different is none of those abductions were ever reported to police.

"The victims of those kidnappings simply reappeared at their home a few days or a few weeks after the kidnapping," Auger told CBC. "So it is possible the same thing will happen with Renda and we will never know if someone paid the ransom."

Renda part of tight-knit family



Renda is believed to be the right-hand man to Nicolo (Nick) Rizzuto, presumed elderly patriarch of Canada's most well-known Mafia clan.

Renda's wife Maria is Nicolo Rizzuto's daughter and his brother-in-law, Vito Rizzuto, is Montreal's alleged Mafia boss, now serving time in a Colorado prison on racketeering charges related to a trio of Brooklyn cold case homicides in the '80s.

Renda himself was released from prison several months ago after he pleaded guilty to gangsterism-related charges. But after reaching a plea bargain with the Crown, Rizzuto pleaded guilty to possession of proceeds of a crime, and possession of the proceeds of crime for the benefit of a criminal organization.

He is believed to have handled finances for the Rizzuto family and was one of dozens arrested during massive sweeps in 2006 part of Operation Colisée, a drawn-out investigation authorities described as a major crackdown on organized crime.

Renda was also uncle and godfather to Nicolo (Nick) Rizzuto Jr., Vito's son, who was killed in broad daylight last December in what crime watchers described as a targeted attack on the Rizzuto clan.

Thursday, May 20, 2010

mafia drug baron’ arrested outside Rome:





Lucca, 20 May (AKI) – Italian police on Thursday arrested fugitive Neapolitan mafia drug baron Michele Chierchia at a villa near Fiumicino airport outside Rome. The felon was listed among the country’s 100 most dangerous fugitives, and anti-mafia prosecutors in three different regions had issued arrest warrants for him on drug trafficking charges.

Fifty-eight year-old Chierchia reportedly congratulated the anti-drugs police from the central Italian city of Lucca when they arrested him, marvelling at how they had found his hideout. He was taken to police headquarters in Rome.

His arrest followed a police investigation that began in April in the area of Tuscany surrounding Lucca, where two of Chierchia’s two children lived.

Last weekend, Lucca police managed to track Chierchia to the suburb of Fiumicino.

Chierchia had been living in the villa for some time, only making occasional trips to the Campania region surrounding Naples, where he was a local mafia boss in the southern city’s Torre Annunziata district.

Arrest warrants against Chierchia were issued by anti-mafia prosecutors in Lucca, Naples and in the Sardinia region’s capital, Cagliari.

Earlier on Thursday, Italian police arrested seven people near Rome with suspected links to the Naples’ mafia or Camorra.

Police also seized property worth 4 million euros in the early morning operation in the Rome and Latina provinces near the Italian capital.

Those arrested in that operation are believed to be members of the Naples mafia’s powerful Casalesi clan. Fugitive Pasquale Noviello was reported to be among those arrested
http://www.adnkronos.com/AKI/English/Security/?id=3.1.419534202.

Tuesday, May 11, 2010

Mob-star Lilo Brancato, prison pals with Plaxico





Lillo Brancato — the star of “A Bronx Tale” (1993) who is doing 10 years for a 2005 burglary in which an off-duty cop was killed — has never been in better shape. He has made friends in prison with former Giants wide receiver Plaxico Burress — who is doing two years for gun possession — in the protective custody unit at the Oneida Correctional Facility in Rome, NY. “They are buds. They work out together,” nightlife impresario Noel Ashman, who talks to Brancato every week, told Page Six. Brancato, who was able to kick his drug habit behind bars, has gotten a lot stronger and healthier. “He earned his GED [high school diploma], and now he’s taking college courses,” Ashman said. “He’s clean. He sounds great. He’s excited. In a horrible away, he’s almost grateful.” While Burress is due to get out early next year, Brancato isn’t eligible for parole until 2014.

http://www.nypost.com/p/pagesix/jail_can_be_good_for_health_xlsr42CVTMzK5VYLiZzeSM

Imprisoned actor Lillo Brancato beats up inmate who wouldn't cut short phone call
New York Post
... about getting high once he's sprung and obsesses over the mob -- reading book after book about organized crime. "He got this fetish with the Mafia. ...

Friday, April 30, 2010

After the mob, Joe DeFede ex-Lucchese mafia boss is barely getting by


A SATURDAY, 11 a.m. Seniors’ hour at the diner.

An old man with a hearing aid butters his toast. Two Jamaican nurses help a woman with a walker through the door. An elderly mother and her daughter share a stack of pancakes, the mother guiding her fork past the oxygen tube in her nose.

Sitting in one booth with his wife, the former acting boss of the Luchese crime family tucks into his $4 plate of scrambled eggs. He wears a pink Hawaiian shirt, a gold medallion, a brand-new pair of therapeutic sneakers. He is talking about the old days: everything he had, everything he lost.

“How much money?” he asks, responding to the question with a question.

“Awww, tons of money,” he answers. “It’s hard to say how much.”

This is Joe DeFede, a retired New York gangster who oversaw the rackets in the city’s garment district in the 1990s, a perch that provided him with a Cadillac, a driver, three horses stabled at Aqueduct and a home entertainment system columned in the style of ancient Greece. Like many mobsters, he walked through life with dignity and pride and, usually, with several thousand dollars in his pocket.

These days, though, he walks with a faltering step of age and with the weight of financial worry. After a five-year prison stint, legal fees and the crushing costs of creating a new identity — he entered but then left the witness protection program — the boss is almost broke. He and his second wife, Nancy, live on an annual income they said was not much more than $30,000: Social Security, a modest annuity and her pension from 20 years of working in a bank.

“That’s the fear we got,” said Mr. DeFede, 76, a slight man with a bookmaker’s grin who is known as Little Joe. “We try to keep our payments up” — for the car, the house, a recent hip replacement — “but sometimes we can’t hack it.”

Or as Mrs. DeFede, 74, explained, “We’re just scraping by.”

It might be hard to muster sympathy — especially in the midst of a recession — for a guy who once earned his living shaking down businesses and taking illegal bets, even if he served his sentence and testified at several federal trials that helped put his former Mafia colleagues behind bars. But there is no such thing as a Gangster I.R.A., so the DeFedes are living check to check (and under assumed names) on the hard edge of a sharp financial knife.

They are hardly the first to struggle in their golden years when the years that went before were lived outside the law. Before the film “American Gangster” revived his finances, Frank Lucas, who earned — then lost — millions as a heroin dealer, was living in a public housing project in New Jersey. (He is now trying to start his own fashion line.) Henry Hill, a Luchese family associate whose story formed the basis for the movie “Goodfellas,” sells signed posters as well as his memoirs and cookbooks at the Web site goodfellahenry.com.

“These people wind up as desperadoes in a sense,” said Nicholas Pileggi, who wrote, among other things, the screenplay for “Goodfellas.” “They come up with different schemes to survive without a 401(k). Don’t forget, they were hustlers to begin with.”

The DeFedes fit that mold: friendless, jobless and, faced with an uncertain future, living on their wits. Mrs. DeFede has sold jewelry — a ruby necklace, an emerald bracelet — to help support the household and has even written a book about her trials, “Life With Little Joe.”

It is a love story, sort of, opening with a startling scene of a young Mr. DeFede slapping her face. The manuscript encompasses their lives together: from obscurity to opulence, from the bulletproof vest she once found in her husband’s closet to their nervous flight into the federal government’s arms. While one might think a mob moll’s tell-all would make for an easy sale, that has not been the case. Mrs. DeFede’s agent spent an unsuccessful year shopping the book around. The couple still hopes the manuscript will provide them a nest egg. Publish or perish, Mafia style.

Last year, Mrs. DeFede took a job as a cashier at a clothing store. It paid $7.50 an hour and required cleaning toilets. She lasted three days.

As for her husband, she is apt to say, “There’s not a lot of ads out there saying, ‘Wanted: Ex-crime boss of a Mafia family. Ten years’ experience required.’ ”

Not unlike their law-abiding counterparts, they are filled with rage and bitterness — and violent apprehension — at their economic prospects. Mr. DeFede is so suffused with anxiety he sleepwalks and, in that state, literally punches the walls.

“Joe has fights in his sleep, cursing at some shadowy figure from the past,” Mrs. DeFede wrote one evening, jotting down thoughts for a reporter. “He has hit me several times during these episodes. Of course, he didn’t mean to harm me, but after one really bad incident, I was trying to calm him down and




Mr. DeFede was nearing 70 when he got out of prison and discovered that a contract had been taken on his life. He was accused — wrongly, he insists — of stealing nearly a million dollars of Luchese family money. “If I did what they said I did,” he reasoned one night at the dismal bar of a chain restaurant, “you think that I’d be here?”

The DeFedes met in 1958 and married 12 years later, each with a divorce in the rear view. A couple of years ago, they settled here in a 55-and-older community— they insisted its name be withheld for security reasons — and have built a pleasant, albeit precarious, life.

Family is far away: Mrs. DeFede’s son is in New York, in the throes of a recent divorce. Mr. DeFede’s daughter is on Long Island, but visiting is difficult — she lives with his former wife.

They have grandchildren in San Diego but cannot afford the plane ticket. “It’s lonely living alone,” said Mrs. DeFede, a classic tough cookie with an Irish-American wit. “Holidays are the worst. You see other people with their families and it totally breaks your heart.”

A few years ago, her oldest friend from Brooklyn moved into the neighborhood to be with her. But there was drinking, petty fights and eventually unkind words; part of the problem was the friend started dating a retired cop. The two have parted ways, potentially forever. How does one explain oneself to the neighbors, after all?

“We don’t have a life,” Mrs. DeFede said.

What they do have is each other. Mrs. DeFede carries her husband’s glasses and double-checks his payments on the bar bill. Mr. DeFede cleans the gutters — he did, at least, until his hip went bad. She makes suggestions of what he ought to order from the menu. He drives her to the beauty parlor and waits until she is done. She back-seat drives from the front seat of the car.

When evening comes, they watch television together — the History Channel, “Divorce Court,” “Everybody Loves Raymond.” Mr. DeFede plays solitaire. He visits the barbershop, not to have his hair cut, but for company. “They’re Cubans, so they don’t speak too much English — it’s difficult,” he said.

One recent Saturday, they visited a flea market. Mr. DeFede pulled into a spot and hung his disabled parking permit from the mirror. He stepped outside and observed his front bumper, scratched like a scabbed shin.

“Five years old,” he said. “I never drove a car five years old before.” He put his hands together, palms up, and shook them back and forth in disbelief. “Remember that song?” he asked. “ ‘If My Friends Could See Me Now’?”

Inside the bazaar, Mrs. DeFede looked at several items she could not afford. A patterned blouse. A yellow purse. Shoes.

“You see what I’ve done to her?” asked Mr. DeFede, looking on. “You see this? She could’ve had anybody. Anybody. She ended up with me.”

Saturday, April 24, 2010

Michael Franzese ;mafia talk in utica



UTICA —
Former Mafia boss Michael Franzese knows he probably should be dead by now.

He knew too much about the inner workings of organized crime, and his decision to walk away from the Colombo mob family did not sit too well with those who put loyalty above all else, Franzese explained Friday.

So when faced with threats on his life while in prison during the late 1980s and pressured to snitch on other mobsters, the son of Colombo family underboss John “Sonny” Franzese chose to leave behind a lifestyle that made him one of the richest Mafia bosses since Al Capone.

“Anybody in that life has to realize that the life is destructive to families and to the people that you love … it’s just not what it’s cracked up to be” said Franzese, now 58.

Prompted in the late-1980s by his love for a born-again Christian who would become his wife, Camille Garcia, Franzese took steps to set himself on a path to redemption. Now, Franzese tours the country to encourage people to make the same positive changes in their lives.

This weekend, Franzese will return to Utica to speak at the Redeemer Church at 931 Herkimer Road about a life that brought him prestige and wealth, as well as many haunting regrets. The nondenominational church is headed by Pastor Michael Servello Jr.

As Franzese will tell those who gather to hear him speak, he became an official “made” member of the Colombia Mafia family Halloween night in 1975 at age 24. While Franzese said he initially jumped into organized crime in an attempt to get his father, “Sonny” Franzese, out of prison on trumped-up charges, he soon found himself rising in the ranks to a Mafia “capo,” or captain.

“Once I get into something, I’m going to be the best possible soldier, and that’s what happened,” Franzese said “Quite honestly, the life took hold of me. If you’re not into it with your heart, mind and soul, then you won’t survive.”

As Colombo soldier Joseph “Joe-Joe” Vitacco mentored Franzese into the underworld, Franzese said he would accompany Vitacco to Utica for business during the 1970s. It was here that Vitacco had ties with brothers Salvatore and Joseph Falcone, who reportedly ran organized crime rackets in the Utica area.

Franzese also heard of Dominic Bretti over the years, a Utica man who would join forces with Donato “Danny” Nappi and John Anthony D’Amico to kill Dawn Grillo in 1979. Like Franzese, Bretti claimed to be a born-again Christian, but Bretti later admitted that his phony conversion was only a scam to build a Utica-based crime empire.

While Franzese wouldn’t get into the details of his most serious regrets, he does admit that the lifestyle required him to turn a blind eye to many things.

“Yes, there were things I did that were distasteful and that bothered me,” Franzese said. “But I did it anyway, and that’s what you have to do in that life in order to survive.”

But once Franzese decided to step back from all that tragic unpleasantness, he knew that he could find himself in serious trouble if he made any wrong steps. So Franzese never snitched on anyone, he never “sold anybody short,” and he outlived all the people who might have wanted to harm him.

“Did I live in fear? No, because you pretty much know what fear is all about in that life,” Franzese said. “But I was never 100 percent confident that I would survive all of this.”

Despite the repeated death threats, Franzese did survive, and that is the message he tries to share with everyone else.

“For me, the bottom-line in all of this is that God had a different purpose for me in my life, and if He didn’t I don’t think I would have succeeded in anything,” Franzese said. “It’s pretty hard to deny that God didn’t have a hand in this.”

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Gambino Sanitaion boss Grimaldi, Pleads Guilty:


NEW YORK—A top Department of Sanitation official pleaded guilty on Tuesday on bribery charges in connection with the Gambino organized crime family.
New York Attorney General Andrew Cuomo’s office said that New York City Department of Sanitation Deputy Chief Frederick Grimaldi, 44, was involved in a scheme where he obtained illegal kickbacks for a construction project.

Grimaldi apparently got the kickbacks while overseeing a Department of Sanitation contract on building blocks that were supposed house road salt. His father-in-law, an alleged Gambino crime family member Michael Murdocco, orchestrated the deal, said Cuomo’s office.

“This corrupt Sanitation manager betrayed the public and the city agency where he held a coveted, well-paid position,” said Department of Investigation Commissioner Rose Gill Hearn. “Fittingly, he stands convicted of a felony, his fate sealed by his own greed, incriminating words, and conduct,” said Hearn.

Another man, William Cosidente, 45, also had connections with Murdocco, pleaded guilty on the same day on extortion charges.

Cosidente was the apparent “muscle” in an illegal sports betting ring controlled by an organized crime syndicate operating out of Staten Island. According to Cuomo’s office, Murdocco had Cosidente strong arm various people to collect gambling debts.

Grimaldi pleaded guilty on bribe receiving in the third degree and will receive somewhere between 2-7 years when sentenced. He is expected to be sentenced on July 14. Cosidente will be sentenced on May 27 for grand larceny and will receive between 1.3 to 4 years.

Murdocco pleaded guilty last year on Enterprise Corruption charges and will be sentenced on June 22.

The gambling ring was run by the Gambino family, generating hundreds of thousands of dollars. Gamblers bet on horse races, professional football, baseball, hockey, and basketball games. If the gambler didn’t pay up, the crime family would use threats of violence to get their money.

“My office will continue to work closely with our colleagues at all levels of law enforcement in our ongoing efforts to combat organized crime in our neighborhoods and corruption in our government,” said Cuomo.

The attorney general’s Organized Crime Task Force along with the NYPD obtained evidence via wiretaps and traditional investigative techniques, said Cuomo’s office.

Back in November, Gambino crime family captain Carmine Sciandra pleaded guilty on enterprise corruption and grand larceny for his role in the crime syndicate, which included loan sharking and illegal gambling. He is forced to give up $1.2 million and will be sentenced to 1.5 to 4.5 years in prison starting on June 22. http://www.theepochtimes.com/n2/content/view/33319/

Gambino-organized-crime-family chared with teenage sex trafficing



The Mafia is alive and kicking – and pimping out teenage girls for sex on Craigslist

Authorities on Tuesday charged seven reputed members of the Gambino Crime Family with running an interstate sex-trafficking ring – calling it a “new low” for the mob.

Another seven wiseguys – including the family’s current boss, Daniel Marino - were also busted for a litany of crimes, some dating back to the era when John Gotti was in charge.

Authorities said the prostitution service was a first for an organized crime crew.

“No crime seems too depraved to be exploited if it was a money-maker, including the sexual exploitation of a 15-year-old,” said FBI Special Agent-in-Charge George Venizelos.

Aleged Gambino soldier Thomas Orefice is accused of hatching the scheme to recruit young women from various strip clubs to work as prostitutes.

Prosecutors say Orefice advertised the girls, ranging in age from 15 to 19, on Craigslist with ads that included the phone number of Gambino madam Suzanne Porcelli

Porcelli set up the appointments, and Orefice’s crew members drove the women to their bookings, waited for them and took half the cash, prosecutors say.

As a sideline, Orefice made these same women available to gamblers who played poker at his illegal high-stakes games, prosecutors charge.

The indictment also includes charges of murder, narcotics trafficking, loansharking, extortion and an aborted jury tampering scheme for Gotti’s 1992 trial.

“Rumors of the Mafia’s demise are greatly exaggerated,”Manhatten US Atorrney Preet Bharara said.

Saturday, April 17, 2010

Remains believed to be those of Gary Westerman may hold many clues, says forensic expert Dr. Michael Baden


Organized-crime investigators likely found a fully-clothed skeleton when they uncovered in Agawam 10 days ago what are believed to be the remains of an ex-convict missing since 2003, a renowned forensic pathologist says.

Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno- Even years after their demise, the dead can talk, says Dr. Michael M. Baden. Baden has served as the forensic expert in high-profile criminal investigations, including the O.J. Simpson case and the assassination of President John F. Kennedy.

“The dead can say a lot. They can tell us what happened to them and who it is who may have killed them,” Baden said during a telephone interview this week.

FBI agents and State Police organized crime investigators on April 5 closed in on a wooded area behind a home at 160 Springfield St. in Agawam, bringing with them excavation equipment and other tools.

They remained there for four days, working into the night under blazing lights towards the end of the search. A medical examiner’s van ultimately carted away what are widely believed to be the remains of Gary D. Westerman, a 49-year-old Springfield man who vanished in late 2003.

Dr. Michael BadenThe dig came seven years after Westerman’s whereabouts had been labeled a missing-persons case. Westerman, who had a string of criminal convictions dating back to his teen years and strong ties to organized crime, was believed to have been killed by rival gangsters. However, his body had never surfaced.

The excavation in Agawam came just days after reputed Genovese crime family captain Anthony J. Arillotta – charged in federal court in Manhattan with the 2003 murder of his predecessor Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno – dropped out of sight in the federal prison system.

That particular vanishing had all the marks of a turncoat, but law enforcement officials have refused to confirm or deny it.

Authorities also have refused to officially say they were searching for Westerman, but sources close to the investigation say they were led there by someone with knowledge of Westerman’s whereabouts.

Sources who spoke on condition of anonymity said it appears Westerman was shot twice in the head at the site, and then buried a short distance away in a hand-dug grave approximately 8 feet deep.



Baden said that, depending on the quality and dampness of the soil, there could be a complete loss of soft tissue but that investigators would likely find bones, bullets, hair, teeth and some personal effects of the deceased.

“Of everything in the body, the teeth stay the longest,” explained Baden, who still acts as a forensic consultant to the New York State Police in addition to his cases across the country and around the world. He is not a consultant in the Westerman case.

“If they were looking for somebody in particular they probably could make an identification within minutes from dental records,” he said

Baden also said most clothing holds up well, particularly cottons and other natural fibers. So Westerman could have, for example, been unearthed in the same jeans and sneakers he was wearing on the night he was allegedly killed.

“The nature of the clothing can be important if they had a snitch who told them what kind of clothing he was wearing when he died,” Baden said.

At such exhumations, Baden said, a forensic anthropologist is typically summoned to the scene. The digs are painstaking and mostly done through gentle sifting by hand of the soil around the remains.

Ballistics tests will ensue, according to Baden, along with an examination of entrance and exit wounds if the victim was, in fact, shot to death.

“They’re also looking for any other kind of information in the area . . . fibers of clothing on the surrounding brush .¤.¤.One time we found a boot print in a grave that was helpful in identifying the digger,” Baden said.

He added that though identification through dental records is quick and decisive, investigators will almost certainly send the remains for DNA testing also.

“They may not make any official announcements until they get the DNA results back, which usually takes about a week,” Baden said. “It’s not even really necessary but juries expect DNA evidence.”

The final step will be a criminal prosecution of those believed to have been involved in the killing. Prosecutors have refused to say when charges might come in connection with the Westerman case. However, federal court filings have stated investigators believe that at a minimum, Arillotta, who also was Westerman’s brother-in-law, and Arillotta enforcers Fotios and Ty Geas, brothers, had a hand in Westerman’s death.

Gary Westerman arrives at Springfield District Court September 13, 1974, to be arraigned on a burglary charge.Fotios Geas, 43, is Arillotta’s codefendant in the Bruno murder case – part of a broad racketeering indictment out of U.S. District Court in New York. Ty Geas lives in the area since he was released from jail in 2007 after an assault conviction.

State Police investigators have said previously that Arillotta, backed by the brothers, went on a short but violent reign to unseat Bruno as the region’s mob boss and that Westerman may have been part of that campaign.

Westerman served a 10-year state-prison sentence beginning in 1988 for his involvement in a Florida-to-Massachusetts cocaine trafficking ring that was tied to organized crime. A witness at his trial said Westerman used to tote kilos of cocaine stuffed in the legs of baggy pants.

While out on parole, he was convicted of a 1996 truck heist with Fotios Geas, when the two made off with furniture and computers. The Geases and co-defendant Arthur “Artie” Nigro, the reputed onetime head of the Genovese crime family – which mob investigators label the most feared of ...


Even at 19, Westerman was in 1973 charged along with two others with robbing Eastfield Mall vendors for jewelry, fur and leather coats, $28,000 in prescription drugs. Police said the men crawled in through the roof and slithered into the stores through air conditioning vents.

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/2010/04/remains_believed_to_be_those_o.html

Friday, April 16, 2010

Genovese organized crime family Capo, Joseph 'The Eagle' Gatto, dies


Joseph “The Eagle” Gatto of Paterson, a reputed captain in the Genovese Crime Family who allegedly inherited his legendary gangster father’s lucrative North Jersey gambling rackets, died last week in Hackensack.

The cause of death of the 65-year-old son of the late Louis “Streaky” Gatto was not made public.

The brief notice announcing his death, published April 10, was in stark contrast to the reams of newspaper stories connecting Gatto’s name to gambling and loan-sharking investigations.

The notice stated that he was born in Paterson, lived in Hawthorne from 1960 until 2001 when he moved back to Paterson, and served in the Army in Vietnam.

Most relatives could not be reached for comment, or would not speak on the record.

“He was a nice guy, a business guy,” said one relative, who didn’t want to be identified. “We’re just working people.”

Tall and heavy set, Gatto took over the crew once run by his father, who reportedly controlled a multimillion-dollar gambling empire, when the elder Gatto was sentenced to 65 years in prison June 1991 for racketeering and murder conspiracy.

At the time, Louis “Streaky” Gatto, a captain in the North Jersey Genovese family, was said to be a favorite of imprisoned Genovese boss Vincent “Chin” Gigante.

“Streaky” Gatto died in prison in 2002, after a battle with prostate cancer.

Joseh Gatto’s brother, Louis Gatto Jr., died in 2000 while serving in federal prison.

At a New Jersey Commission of Investigation hearing in 2003 on organized crime in the state, Joseph Gatto was identified as a capo, or crew leader, of one of five main Genovese crews in New Jersey.

The Genovese family has long been the dominant crime family in Bergen, Passaic and Hudson counties, running the largest bookmaking and loan-sharking rings in the New York-New Jersey metropolitan area.

Gatto’s death came nearly one year after a grand jury declined to indict him in a case that authorities had dubbed “Operation Jersey Boyz,” a joint probe by the State Police and Bergen County.

Gatto, and 43 alleged mobsters and associates, were rounded up in December 2004 on racketeering and gambling charges in connection with a vast offshore gambling operation by the Genovese crew that took in millions of dollars in illegal wagers for the Genovese, Lucchese, Bonanno and Gambino crime families.

Also arrested was Frank Lagano, 67, of Tenafly, an alleged Lucchese soldier who was shot and killed in April 2007 in what authorities said they believe was a hit outside a diner he owned in East Brunswick.

In well-publicized raids, investigators seized 25 guns and nearly $1.3 million in cash.

Gatto, who had been released from Ray Brook federal prison in upstate New York in October 2003 after serving 53 months of a 61-month federal gambling and loansharking conviction, was accused of controlling a wire room in Costa Rica, known as Catalina Sports.

Prosecutors said the gambling venture had 12,000 customers nationwide and raked in about $300,000 a week for the family.

Federal agents arrested Gatto a day after he was charged in the “Operation Jersey Boyz” investigation, charging him with violating terms of his release from federal prison.

The “Jersey Boyz” case began unraveling in late 2005 amid concerns over the handling of informants and other legal issues.

The probe was compromised after an investigator with the state Division of Criminal Justice tipped off one of the targets — a mobster-turned-informant — that he was under scrutiny by another agency and promised to protect him, a recorded conversation that was withheld from a state judge, The Record reported in 2008.

A state judge vacated pleas from 10 defendants in the case and opened the way for 33 others to be cleared and suppressed all the wiretap and search warrant evidence. The Bergen Prosecutor’s Office appealed the judge’s ruling.

Some of the wiretaps were reinstated, and Superior Court Judge Marilyn C. Clark of Passaic County, who authorized the electronic surveillance in the case, notified defense lawyers that the prosecutor’s office was going to proceed with charges against 22 of the defendants.Also assigned to the Lucchese crime family will be with am Eastern crime But the Gambino and Genove

The grand jury’s no-bill in May 2009 meant that Joseph Gatto died a free man.

By Justo Bautista. http://www.northjersey.com/obituaries/Joseph_The_Eagle_Gatto_reputed_captain_in_Genovese_crime_family_dies.html

Camorra-Mafia boss, Nicola Panaro captured after 7 years -Hollywood Mafia Mobsters


ROME – POLICE on Wednesday arrested the boss of the Naples-area Camorra mafia, Nicola Panaro, considered one of Italy’s 30 most dangerous fugitives, the ANSA news agency reported.

The 41-year-old head of the most powerful Camorra clan the Casalesi had been on the run for seven years, ANSA said.

Interior Minister Roberto Maroni hailed the arrest as ‘another extraordinary success by the state against the Camorra.’ Late last month police arrested 12 alleged members of the Casalesi clan including the father and brother of Michele Zagaria, a boss who has been on the run for 15 years.

Last week authorities seized land and buildings worth more than 700 million euros ($1.3 billion) from suspected Camorra mafia members in what Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi called the biggest operation of its kind.

The Camorra are one of Italy’s four organised crime syndicates



http://www.straitstimes.com/BreakingNews/World/Story/STIStory_514777.html
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