by PolackTony » Tue Nov 01, 2022 7:08 pm
johnny_scootch wrote: ↑Tue Nov 01, 2022 6:32 pm
Before a suspect was named in Grasso’s killing, the following March, Milano was arrested along with Frank Pugliano on charges of conspiracy and racketeering. But he was free on bail in October 1989, four months after the murder, sponsoring the induction of Vincent Federico into the Patriarca crime family. Federico, 30, was on a 28 hour furlough from the Massachusetts Corrections Institute at Shirley on “family business.”
Really great article but I thought this part was great. This guy got a furlough from prison and used it to go to his induction ceremony. Keeping it as real as it gets!
Yeah, that was amazing lol.
If you haven't previously read Justin's blog (not meaning you, specifically, Johnny, but everyone), there's a lot of really good stuff there. Mostly genealogy stuff that's more germane to the stuff I tend to focus on (connections back to Italy, deeper mafia history in the US), which certainly isn't everyone's cup of tea, but Justin has done a lot of useful work there.
[quote=johnny_scootch post_id=242674 time=1667352728 user_id=105]
[i] Before a suspect was named in Grasso’s killing, the following March, Milano was arrested along with Frank Pugliano on charges of conspiracy and racketeering. But he was free on bail in October 1989, four months after the murder, sponsoring the induction of Vincent Federico into the Patriarca crime family. Federico, 30, was on a 28 hour furlough from the Massachusetts Corrections Institute at Shirley on “family business.”[/i]
Really great article but I thought this part was great. This guy got a furlough from prison and used it to go to his induction ceremony. Keeping it as real as it gets!
[/quote]
Yeah, that was amazing lol.
If you haven't previously read Justin's blog (not meaning you, specifically, Johnny, but everyone), there's a lot of really good stuff there. Mostly genealogy stuff that's more germane to the stuff I tend to focus on (connections back to Italy, deeper mafia history in the US), which certainly isn't everyone's cup of tea, but Justin has done a lot of useful work there.