Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

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Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by SonnyBlackstein » Mon Aug 14, 2023 12:10 pm

B. wrote: Sun Aug 13, 2023 10:06 pm Robert Amuso's son-in-law is Bonanno member Mike Padavona.
Wow. Great Info B

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by B. » Sun Aug 13, 2023 10:06 pm

Robert Amuso's son-in-law is Bonanno member Mike Padavona.

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by queensnyer » Sun Aug 13, 2023 12:53 am

SonnyBlackstein wrote: Sat Aug 12, 2023 2:44 pm Vic only had daughters right?
Did his brother have any kids/boys?
Joey D married into the family, just trying to understand the Amuso blood family involvement (refer Persico).
rob had a son...no involvement. kids a junkie/ sad i believe hes bobby son. dont fuck with him because hes a skell but hes well known in hb

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by SonnyBlackstein » Sat Aug 12, 2023 2:44 pm

Vic only had daughters right?
Did his brother have any kids/boys?
Joey D married into the family, just trying to understand the Amuso blood family involvement (refer Persico).

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by JMAN723 » Sat Aug 12, 2023 2:17 pm

They didn’t give any of their victims a compassionate “release” so at the end of the day you gotta reap what you sow

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by DonPeppino386 » Sat Aug 12, 2023 9:27 am

Thanks for posting. I think this is not at all surprising given the scope of the crimes he was convicted of. They definitely want him to die in jail.

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by furiofromnaples » Sat Aug 12, 2023 1:47 am

Gotti asked for compassionate release? No
Scarfo asked for compassionate release? No

This is the life you have chosen,go through it to the end.

Re: Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by Ivan » Thu Aug 10, 2023 3:02 pm

the least-surprising event in mob history

no compassion for The Terminator, imagine my shock

Vic Amuso denied compassionate release

by JohnnyS » Thu Aug 10, 2023 2:49 pm

https://www.amny.com/police-fire/courts ... s-release/
A federal judge said Amuso, convicted in 1991 on racketeering charges and for nine murders, had sent too many people to their graves, and caused too much destruction and mayhem, to deserve a premature end to his life sentence.

In June, the now 88-year-old mafioso requested his release on time served due to suffering a hodgepodge of age-related ailments, most notably debilitating osteoarthritis that has left him wheelchair-bound.

He also argued that he’s had a flawless behavior record while incarcerated at Federal Correctional Complex, Butner in North Carolina.

But on Aug. 10, senior District Court Judge Frederic Block denied Amuso’s petition, asserting that the scope of his crimes was “simply too serious, too disrespectful of the law, and too destructive to the fabric of society to warrant anything other than a life sentence.”

The court also contends that Amuso has continued to run the Lucchese family from prison, which he denies.

Amuso was dubbed “the Deadly Don” by an assistant US attorney, and the Lucchese family under his tenure “enjoyed a particularly bloody reputation” even by the standards of the mob. During his reign in the late 80s and early 90s, Amuso directly ordered the murders of at least a dozen individuals, nine of whom were successfully whacked by his underlings.

They include Michael Pappadio, a soldier in the outfit accused of skimming off the top of the Luccheses’ textile interests. He was bludgeoned to death with a length of metal cable and shot on Amuso’s orders at a Queens bagel shop in May 1989.

The following year, another soldier, Bruno Facciola, was lured to an autobody shop and executed on the orders of Amuso, who suspected him of squealing to the feds. After shooting him between the eyes, the killer placed a dead canary in the victim’s mouth as a warning to others thinking of cooperating with prosecutors.

The man who killed Pappadio, Al D’Arco, would later become acting boss but ultimately turned state’s witness and, with capo Peter “Fat Pete” Chiodo, helped put Amuso behind bars with his testimony. Chiodo survived an assassination attempt after Amuso suspected he had turned, while D’Arco defected after narrowly escaping what he suspected to be the setup of a hit.

In addition to the murders, Amuso was also convicted on charges of labor racketeering, tax fraud, and extortion. He was a central figure in a massive scheme to defraud the New York City Housing Authority by inflating the cost of window installations, pocketing about $1 million in kickbacks from vendors.

Amuso continued to run the family from his prison cell, but insists he is no longer in charge and is not involved in Lucchese affairs. The feds contest this, however, noting testimony from a former soldier that Amuso orchestrated an internal leadership change from his cell as recently as 2017.

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