Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

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Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by SonnyBlackstein » Tue Aug 11, 2015 12:12 am

Interesting.

Thanks Wiseguy.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Wiseguy » Mon Aug 10, 2015 11:53 am

Ralph A. Santaniello, a.k.a. "Ralphie Sant"

Age: 47

Hometown: Springfield

Last rank held: soldier/rising leader in "Springfield Crew," power-sharing with cousin Albert Calvanese, former Anthony Arillotta minion

Criminal history: Santaniello was Arillotta's co-defendant twice: first, in 1993 for waging a home invasion in Springfield armed with sticks and broom handles in 1993. Both were charged along with Gerald Daniele (still a fixture at the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Club with Santaniello et al). Daniele admitted he was going after a family member of an ex-girlfriend.

The charges against Arillotta were dropped. Santaniello, then, 25, and three others pleaded guilty to assault charges in connection with the incident. He also pleaded guilty to a separate assault at the now-defunct Gaslight Lounge on Allen Street, a once-popular nightspot. Another patron said Santaniello cracked him over the head with a beer bottle. Santaniello said he was too drunk to remember.

For the next dozen years, Santaniello managed to stay out of law enforcement's cross-hairs, by all accounts. However, he was in 2005 charged along with Arillotta and two other men in connection with a gambling and loan-sharking ring investigators said grossed $500,000 a month.

With Arillotta at the helm enjoying relatively new power as Greater Springfield's Mafia Capo (which Arillotta orchestrated behind Al Bruno's back and through his murder) Santaniello assisted in accounting, strategy and collections efforts. He also was kind enough to offer up his parents' house on Converse Street in Longmeadow for weekly team sit-downs.

However, state police planted several bugs in the house and recorded the meetings for months. The recordings showed the team talking about who was placing which bets, who owed what money, and who was behind on their debts. One snippet showed Santaniello and Arillotta planning how to approach one debtor who owed more than $21,000:

Arillotta: "Grab him, and say look, either come up with the money or get out of business."

Santaniello: "I'll say I'm not going to play games."

Arillotta: "Say, pay ah, fifteen hundred a month. He pays us, we'll leave ya alone. Otherwise, we're going to send people into ya. You might come home, someone's grabbing ya, like that."

Santaniello was later overheard telling co-defendent Richie Valentini, a former postman, to "slap him."

In the end, the men hijacked the debtor's car and title, and sold it at auction.

Other information included in the affidavits to extend warrants for surveillance indicate Valentini and Santaniello were addicted to "prescription and non-prescription drugs" and made references over the phone to drugs that needed to be "cooked."

While under surveillance, the men also purchased new "burner phones" under aliases to attempt to stay ahead of the police, records show. Investigators were nonetheless intercepting their phone conversations, 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Police picked up snippets of their dizzying accounting practices with several extended warrants to tap their phones, including from March 22, 2005;

Valentini: I mean, so, you know. Nicky's going to give you a call right?

Santaniello: Who?

Valentini: Nicky's

Santaniello: Nicky who?

Valentini: Little Nicky.

Santaniello: (unintelligible)

Valentini: Nicky used to be like clockwork every Monday. (laughs)

Santaniello: Okay, uhm, now, Timmy's (unintelligible) one fifteen and ah Google's is what, two forty right. So we'll shoot down and (unintelligible)

Valentini: Yeah.

Santaniello: Should be on the piece of paper this week, (unintelligible) Richie, you know, we should start organizing the money in order. (UNINTELLIGIBLE) yeah, (unintelligible) we got Granby two weeks, he is all set. Anthony, I don't see. Pauly Calcasola, you see him?

Valentini: I called him, he didn't call me back.

Santaniello: Well, we'll get that. So we'll just put it on (unintelligible) Okay, Umberto, Pauly C., Pat we see and Mark, that's (unintelligible), Mike, I see him, (unintelligible), did Louie, he didn't (unintelligible), Mike I see, Danny I see, Dino gave me four weeks, Anthony still owes Rico, we're all set, T owes two hundred. Dog, to T owes ah, two hundred. Mark it down (unintelligible)

Valentini: Okay, the five?

R. SANTANIELLO: Yeah, he gave me ah, (unintelligible), eight, I'll take it out of mine, (unintelligible), you know what I mean? So we got deduct (unintelligible), so the total, okay Richie's (unintelligible), two thousand two dollars, that's what you get Richie for the thing, okay? So one fifty plus Google's is what? Two forty?

Valentini: Two forty.

Santaniello:Two forty, you get Jimmy's Sant, ah Stellato's?

Valentini:Jimmy Stellato, I called him. He didn't call me back.

Santaniello: So, okay, so Jimmy's Stellato's we'll get his too. We'll just add it to you, our figure. Okay, that equals, okay three ninety divided by three, is one thirty is got to come off each of our figure okay? All right Richie?

Valentini: Yup.

Santaniello pleaded guilty and received two years in jail plus probation. He was ordered by a judge to speak to local high school students about the dangers of betting as part of his probation. His mother also was charged in connection with the betting ring, but received probation.

Status: Released in 2007

Miscellaneous: Former cook at Amedeo's ... Father Amedeo was a longtime associate of Bruno, until the two had a falling out in the 1990s ... Placed on the "pay no mind" list, Amedeo Santaniello spent a lot of time in Florida, leaving his Ferrari for sale on the lawn at his Converse Street home after his son's 2005 indictment ... Amedeo has re-emerged since Bruno's death.

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... ry_package

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Handsome Stevie » Fri Aug 07, 2015 8:58 pm

Also read this today on aboutthemafia.com

Genovese crime family has long been known to control mafia activity in Springfield, Massachusetts and the syndicates crew there now has a new boss. According to sources mobster Albert Calvanese is now the leaders of the Springfield mafia crew for the Genovese family. The 52 year old mobster is known on streets as a fearsome enforcer and was a top earner under former Springfield boss Anthony “Bingy” Arillota. An internal war between the young up and coming Arillota and his mentor Adolfo “Big Al” Bruno threatened to destroy the Genovese family grip on the mob stronghold in the mid 2000’s.

Arillotta took control of the mafia crew after he green lighted a hit man which gunned down Bruno in front of his social club in 2003. He was a freshly made guy in the New York Mafia and with in months had been made a captain in the Genovese family after the death of Bruno. His reign wouldn’t last long as he went on to turn rat after being indicted in 2010.

Calvanese plead guilty in 2007 to racketeering and loan sharking charges and quietly did his time finally getting out in 2011. With the Arillotta saga playing out just as he finished up his prison sentence an opening had developed for a new crew leader in Springfield. So now Calvanese takes control and hopes his reign will be longer then that of his predecessor. Investigative reporter Stephanie Barry is credited with the intel on the new appointment via Scott Burnstein and his gangsterreport site.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Handsome Stevie » Fri Aug 07, 2015 8:57 pm

Albert Calvanese

Age: 52

Hometown: Springfield

Last rank held: loan-sharking freelancer, de facto head of the new "Springfield Crew," according to law enforcement sources

Criminal history: Unlike most organized crime figures, Calvanese has but a brief, albeit colorful criminal record. Long considered as one of the stealthiest and dangerous loan sharks in the region, according to law enforcement officials, Calvanese avoided prosecution until 2006. That year, he was caught on audiotape beating a government witness over a debt. Charged in federal court with extortion, investigators made public a recording by former mortgage broker Mark L. McCarthy.

The tape broadcast a confusing medley of profanities, threats, a dinging car door alarm and the thud of an apparent closed fist against flesh. Assistant U.S. Attorney Todd Newhouse told a magistrate judge at the time that Calvanese trapped McCarthy, who owed him $20,000, on a quiet street in Wilbraham.

According to the recording:

Calvanese: "You're avoiding me (expletive)!" A car alarm is heard dinging.

McCarthy: "I ain't avoiding you ... I just don't have it."

Calvanese: "Go get my money or I'll beat the (expletive) out of you in front of your wife, you (expletive) ... Are you (expletive) around or what?" The sound of an apparent punch follows.

McCarthy: "Don't do that, Al. Don't do that."

McCarthy met with state police after the confrontation, sporting a red and swollen left cheek, Newhouse said. The prosecutor argued that Calvanese had dodged a criminal record previously by operating stealthily and springing surprise meetings on debtors. Court records showed debts to Calvanese had hung over the heads of McCarthy and others for years, and that previous potential witnesses had been too fearful to testify against him.

When Calvanese sought pretrial bail in 2007, a magistrate judge said he was too dangerous to be released. He was a gun enthusiast on methadone who had made threats to McCarthy and his family during recorded prison calls, the judge said. A lawyer for Calvanese offered to post $1 million bail for his client's release, telling the judge the money came from family, friends, lottery winnings and revenues from a family-owned pizza shop.

Calvanese pleaded guilty to the extortion counts in 2007 and was sentenced to more than five years in prison. He was ordered to forfeit nearly $800,000 in loan-sharking proceeds, according to court records.

Status: Calvanese was released from prison in 2011. Law enforcements sources speaking on condition of anonymity have said Calvanese has emerged as the leader of the "Springfield Crew" in the wake of Anthony Arillotta's prosecution and cooperation with federal investigators. Calvanese faces no new charges.

Miscellaneous: According to multiple sources, Calvanese was recently involved in a clash at Tony's Famous barbershop in Springfield's South End that pitted him and others against convicted loan shark and barber Carmine Manzi. The incident spilled out onto the sidewalk in broad daylight, witnesses said. No charges or police reports have been filed.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Wiseguy » Fri Aug 07, 2015 11:26 am

Fotios "Freddy" and Ty Geas

Ages: 48 and 43, respectively

Hometown: West Springfield

Last ranks held: enforcers, trusted advisors to Anthony Arillotta; held no official rank in the Italian Mafia because the brothers are Greek.

Criminal histories: Both have lifelong criminal histories dating back to their teens. Ty Geas picked up his first Superior Court conviction in 1989 at age 17. The younger Geas was sentenced to a year in jail after firing an assault weapon into the air during a brawl after a high school hockey game. The elder Geas, then 22, pleaded guilty to threatening to murder a witness in that case. Freddy Geas also pleaded guilty that year to smashing a classic car during a bar fight at a former nightclub in Stearns Square called Sh-Booms.

The brothers racked up criminal convictions throughout their 20s and 30s, amassing 75 adult convictions each by the mid-2000s. Freddy Geas was convicted of a truck heist in the late 1990s and was jailed again for a pair of baseball bat beatings in the city's entertainment district in 2004. Ty Geas received a one-year jail sentence in 2006 for a separate beating at the Mardi Gras strip club. When the brothers were briefly free at the same time in the early 2000s, they rose to the top of the local rackets as recognized "muscle" for Arillotta.

They joined Arillotta in a 2008 acquittal on extortion charges in connection with the alleged shake-down of illegal poker machine proprietors Carlo and Genarro Sarno.

Freddy Geas was the second to be charged federally in the Adolfo Bruno murder. He was headed to trial in U.S. District Court in Springfield solo in 2009 when federal investigators in New York brought the case to that district. They charged eight co-conspirators in a wide-ranging conspiracy to violently unseat Bruno from power to pave the way for Arillotta. They also were charged with myriad other mob-related crimes inclluding the 2003 murder of Gary D. Westerman, a rival drug dealer and Arillotta's brother-in-law. Westerman's body was discovered in an eight-foot grave in a wooded lot in Agawam after Arillotta flipped on his former cohorts.

The Geas brothers and onetime acting Genovese crime family boss Arthur "Artie" Nigro stood trial in 2011. All were convicted and sentenced to life in prison. During the trial, prosecutors presented as evidence recorded jail conversations between the brothers. They showed Ty Geas' apparent resignation over being charged in the Westerman murder after Arillotta decided to cooperate with the government.

"So I guess my time is short here," Ty Geas said to his older brother, referring to the dig for Westerman's body in 2010. Stories in The Republican at the time chronicled the dig to unearth Westerman's remains. "It said they only dug one hole," Ty Geas said of one article.

Arillotta testified that Freddy Geas shot Westerman twice in the head, but Westerman began to struggle as the brothers dragged him toward the grave they dug. Arillotta said he and co-defendant Emilio Fusco began bludgeoning Westerman with shovels to finish the job. He said Freddy Geas later marveled at the teamwork involved in the hit. Freddy Geas recruited the paid shooter in the Bruno murder, Frankie Roche, whom he referred to as his "crash dummy" prison buddy.

Arillotta also told jurors Ty Geas lamented shortly before Bruno and Westerman's murders that they had hatched several plans to take out rivals with no results.

"No one was getting killed! We're about nothin'. We're weak. No one's dying!" Arillotta recounted of Ty Geas' frustration.

The brothers professed their innocence at their sentencings before U.S. District Judge P. Kevin Castel.

Statuses: The Geases were originally sentenced to serve their life bids at the same federal prison. However, they were separated and transferred to separate high-security penitentiaries after reportedly assaulting another inmate. Ty Geas is serving life at Victorville U.S. Penitentiary in California. His older brother is behind bars at Hazelton U.S. Penitentiary in West Virginia. They lost initial appeals of their convictions but have filed pending motions to vacate their sentences.

Miscellaneous: The brothers' startling rise to power with Arillotta led one Massachusetts State Police investigator in 2006 to wonder: "How do two Greek kids suddenly rise to the top of the pile?" ... Freddy Geas apparently maintains his sense of humor in prison. In 2013, he sent out hand-drawn Christmas cards featuring one snowman in a bandit's mask holding up another snowman with a hair dryer.

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... ed_stories




Carmine Manzi, a.k.a. "The barber"

Age: 66

Hometown: East Longmeadow

Last rank held: rogue loan-shark, bookmaker, community barber, fringe player, not part of "Springfield Crew"

Criminal history: Manzi was one of 15 caught up in a sweeping racketeering, loan-sharking and gambling indictment by federal authorities in 2000 and 2001. The longtime barber at Tony's Famous Barbershop in Springfield's South End was one of a handful arrested days before Christmas in 2000, and among nine indicted the day after the holiday. Six more defendants were added in a subsequent indictment.

Manzi's co-defendants included his son, Giuseppe, "Little Joe" Manzi; the late Anthony Delevo, who was the head of the local rackets at the time; Emilio Fusco, later implicated in the 2003 murders of Adolfo Bruno and Gary Westerman, now serving a 25-year-sentence for racketeering in a separate case; and the late Albert "Baba" Scibelli, who had been entrenched in the Greater Springfield mob for decades.

Investigators said the wide-reaching schemes were all controlled by the New York City-based Genovese crime family, which has had its grip on Springfield for a century.

State police and federal agents recovered nearly $800,000 in cash from Manzi's home and a safe deposit box at a bank during a state police raid in the summer of 2000; he later forfeited the cash in the criminal case. Manzi and his son were charged with gambling and loan-sharking offenses, plus conspiracy to distribute marijuana. The found cash, however, created problems for Carmine Manzi in the underworld, investigators said, as he hadn't handed up any of the required "tribute" to mob higher-ups including Bruno and Fusco.

Debtors told investigators at the time they often went to the popular barbershop to make payments on gambling and loan-sharking debts. Manzi and his son pleaded guilty to the charges in 2003 and both received 3 1/2 year prison sentences. Little Joe Manzi's bail was revoked when he bludgeoned a man with a golf club in a bar parking lot in the spring of that year. The younger Manzi received a separate, three-year sentence for the beating in 2004, which was tacked on top of his federal sentence.

At the elder Manzi's sentencing, many people including a Massachusetts Trial Court employee, another state worker, a school department employee and a Smith College staffer submitted fawning letters about Manzi's sweet nature and flair for hair.

"In a world soiled by selfishness, boasting and small-minded concerns, he stands large as a man of quiet compassion and unrecognized generosity," English professor Robert E. Hosmer wrote.

Status: Carmine Manzi was released from prison in 2007. He still works long hours at the barbershop, six days a week. Law enforcement sources say Manzi still has money on the street while others close to Manzi say he is "retired."

Miscellaneous: Manzi is known to entertain his clients with nonstop, profane and colorful chatter, which has spawned some spoof voice mail messages that have circulated throughout the city. In a recent dust-up with Albert Calvanese and some of his allies in broad daylight at the shop, witnesses say Manzi held his own.

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... ed_stories




Amedeo Santaniello

Age: 76

Hometowns: Longmeadow and Florida

Last rank held: Once a wingman for Adolfo Bruno, banished in the 1990s, retreated to Florida, reemerged to front pole position after Bruno's death and in the subsequent vacuum created by death and prosecution; elder statesman for "Springfield Crew," according to law enforcement sources

Criminal history: Dust it off. Santaniello received an 18-month federal prison sentence in 1989 for his role in running a numbers operation in upstate New York for Bruno. Then-special prosecutor for the New England Organized Strike Force (now Springfield Assistant U.S. Attorney) Todd Newhouse described Santaniello's role as to "watch out for Bruno's interests" while six others played various roles in the enterprise.

Bruno was identified as "second-in-command" of the Springfield rackets at the time and was serving a prison stint in a separate case.

Late Judge Frank Freedman dismissed Santaniello's version at sentencing that he was caught up in the wrong place at the wrong time.

"I've never been in trouble before," Amedeo Santaniello told Freedman. "If I can get a break, I'd really appreciate it."

Freedman said he agreed with the government's characterization of Amedeo Santaniello.

"I do see you as the Number 1 man in this conspiracy," the judge said.

Santaniello was released from federal prison in 1990. While imprisoned, he was acquitted of attempting to pay off a woman with $300 who his son, Ralph, allegedly assaulted.

In 1993, government witness John "Sonny" Castagna told a federal jury that Amedeo Santaniello stashed his jewelry and identification cards at his restaurant in the early 1980s while Bruno and others went to fatally shoot Joseph Maruca in a barn in Agawam: a contract hit that failed since Maruca survived. Bruno was acquitted of attempted murder and Amedeo Santaniello was never charged.

Amedeo Santaniello and Bruno had a nuclear falling out in the 1990s and the alliance was shattered. It remained so 'til after Bruno's death.

Status: Has faced no new charges; was a target in the 2005 prosecution of his son and wife, court records show, but was never charged.

Miscellaneous: Scratch golfer, excellent bocce player

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... tev_2.html

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Wiseguy » Wed Jul 29, 2015 12:07 pm

Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to Frank Depergola?
By Stephanie Barry
on July 29, 2015



Frank Depergola

Age: 58

Hometown: Springfield

Last rank held: soldier, earner for slain mob boss Adolfo Bruno, member of "Springfield Crew"

Criminal history: Depergola was a longtime restaurateur and "earner" for Bruno before Bruno was gunned down in the parking lot of the Our Lady of Mount Carmel Society on Nov. 23, 2003. Depergola, Bruno's frequent companion, was the only eyewitness of record aside from convicted shooter-for-hire Frankie Roche. Depergola told authorities at the time he could not make a positive identification of the shooter. He was never implicated in the case; nor was he called as a witness during two trials in 2011 and 2012 over Bruno's gangland-style hit.

However, Depergola was caught up in the onslaught of criminal prosecutions of local gangsters in the wake of Bruno's death - part of a squeeze on the underworld. He pleaded guilty in 2006 to loan-sharking charges. Depergola admitted he had been involved in collections on behalf of Bruno from a Westfield pizza shop owner. That debtor, Leo Daniele, was a government witness and the interactions were caught on videotape.

"I'm not going to say the devil made me do it; the only person responsible is me," Depergola told a judge at sentencing.

Depergola previously worked at the former city-run job training center, MCDI, until his layoff in 2001 amid an organized crime probe. Questions arose at that time about his connections to political figures. Depergola's onetime restaurant and bar in Springfield's South End, Angelina's, was a frequent venue for political fund-raisers.

Status: Depergola was released from prison in 2008. He has faced no subsequent prosecutions but may have been a victim of an attempted crime last year, according to police records. On Feb. 28, Depergola was paid a visit as his home by two men, police said, one masked and one unmasked. He told police two men rapped at his door, threatened him with a "fish hook like weapon," called him by name, and said 'Give us the $10,000.'"

No charges were filed in that investigation.

Miscellaneous: Contacted by a reporter after the alleged incident at his home, Depergola said he had no idea who the men were, and had reconsidered whether or not they had called him by name. He did add: "These aren't your regular street criminals."

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... rt_m-rpt-1



Here's an article on Depergola's indictment back in 2005 -

http://www.masslive.com/springfield/cor ... ption.html

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Rocco » Tue Jul 28, 2015 10:32 am

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by JCB1977 » Tue Jul 28, 2015 9:52 am

mike68 wrote:http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... ry_package

Here's the newest one that may answer the question posed earlier, Albert Calvanese is the new Springfield crew boss according to law enforcement sources.
Status: Calvanese was released from prison in 2011. Law enforcements sources speaking on condition of anonymity have said Calvanese has emerged as the leader of the "Springfield Crew" in the wake of Anthony Arillotta's prosecution and cooperation with federal investigators. Calvanese faces no new charges.

Miscellaneous: According to multiple sources, Calvanese was recently involved in an clash at Tony's Famous barbershop in Springfield's South End that pitted him and others against convicted loan shark and barber Carmine Manzi. The incident spilled out onto the sidewalk in broad daylight, witnesses said. No charges or police reports have been filed.
I think somebody on here had mentioned Manzi as being the potential boss, but maybe there is a conflict there?
How many made guys does the Springfield crew have?

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by mike68 » Tue Jul 28, 2015 9:26 am

http://www.masslive.com/news/index.ssf/ ... ry_package

Here's the newest one that may answer the question posed earlier, Albert Calvanese is the new Springfield crew boss according to law enforcement sources.
Status: Calvanese was released from prison in 2011. Law enforcements sources speaking on condition of anonymity have said Calvanese has emerged as the leader of the "Springfield Crew" in the wake of Anthony Arillotta's prosecution and cooperation with federal investigators. Calvanese faces no new charges.

Miscellaneous: According to multiple sources, Calvanese was recently involved in an clash at Tony's Famous barbershop in Springfield's South End that pitted him and others against convicted loan shark and barber Carmine Manzi. The incident spilled out onto the sidewalk in broad daylight, witnesses said. No charges or police reports have been filed.
I think somebody on here had mentioned Manzi as being the potential boss, but maybe there is a conflict there?

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by SonnyBlackstein » Tue Jul 28, 2015 7:19 am

mike68 wrote:Is it possible that they want to trick him into coming back? It's not like he's the sharpest blade in the drawer.
I dont think that'd be the case either Mike.

The Westside dont want the Bureau breathing hell for leather down their necks chasing a govt witness murder in aid of. No way.

They wouldnt want the grief of hitting him, but they sure as hell wouldnt be cleaning the slate either.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by mike68 » Tue Jul 28, 2015 6:35 am

Is it possible that they want to trick him into coming back? It's not like he's the sharpest blade in the drawer.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Hailbritain » Tue Jul 28, 2015 12:05 am

Arillota put acting Genovese boss arite nigro in prison for life , and there gonna welcome him bak with open arms . Yeah right , course they r

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by Wiseguy » Mon Jul 27, 2015 8:12 pm

I don't believe it either but someone will inevitably bring up others who have returned to their old stomping grounds. But it's a stretch, even today, to think he'd be welcomed back.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by SonnyBlackstein » Mon Jul 27, 2015 6:16 pm

Thanks for the post Ivy.

Regards Arilotta's return sanctioned/reconciled?
Utter bullshit.

Re: Greater Springfield mob: Whatever happened to...?

by JCB1977 » Mon Jul 27, 2015 5:53 pm

Wiseguy wrote:
Rumors abound that Arillotta plans to return to Greater Springfield after he concludes his sentence next year. Street sources say the city's so-called "new regime" has reconciled his potential return because Arillotta's testimony didn't cause trouble for any of them, and that Arillotta was backed into a corner by federal investigators.
Interesting....
That's an incredible story...if it's factual. It's hard for me to believe that after cooperating and reading guilty...that they'd welcome him back with open arms.

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