Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

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Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Antiliar » Tue Dec 05, 2017 8:39 pm

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by TwoPiece » Tue Dec 05, 2017 5:38 pm

Antiliar wrote: Tue Dec 05, 2017 1:38 pm The Salvatore Bellomo (BellAmo is a typo) was married to Giovanna (Jennie) DiGillio. Salvatore's father was Liborio, and he was born in Corleone in 1879. Here's info on Jennie:

Name: Giovanna Digiglio
[Giovanna Bellomo]
[Jennie Bellomo]
[Giovanna Bellnio]
Gender: Female
Race: White
Birth Date: 26 Dec 1915
Birth Place: Italy
Death Date: 1 Oct 2001
Father: Joseph Digiglio
Mother: Maria Catalinotto
SSN: 078078956
Notes: Dec 1936: Name listed as GIOVANNA DIGIGLIO; Oct 1966: Name listed as GIOVANNA BELLOMO; Jan 1973: Name listed as JENNIE BELLOMO; : Name listed as GIOVANNA DEGIGLIO BELLNIO

Name: Giovanna Bellomo
Address: 908 Clarence Ave, Bronx, NY, 10465-1608
Yeah that seems to be his family, pretty sure Barney's daughter owns that property in Bronx now.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Antiliar » Tue Dec 05, 2017 1:38 pm

The Salvatore Bellomo (BellAmo is a typo) was married to Giovanna (Jennie) DiGillio. Salvatore's father was Liborio, and he was born in Corleone in 1879. Here's info on Jennie:

Name: Giovanna Digiglio
[Giovanna Bellomo]
[Jennie Bellomo]
[Giovanna Bellnio]
Gender: Female
Race: White
Birth Date: 26 Dec 1915
Birth Place: Italy
Death Date: 1 Oct 2001
Father: Joseph Digiglio
Mother: Maria Catalinotto
SSN: 078078956
Notes: Dec 1936: Name listed as GIOVANNA DIGIGLIO; Oct 1966: Name listed as GIOVANNA BELLOMO; Jan 1973: Name listed as JENNIE BELLOMO; : Name listed as GIOVANNA DEGIGLIO BELLNIO

Name: Giovanna Bellomo
Address: 908 Clarence Ave, Bronx, NY, 10465-1608

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Antiliar » Tue Dec 05, 2017 1:36 pm

Barney's Bravado Gives the Feds Fits
By JERRY CAPECI | May 3, 2007
The Genovese family lived up to its reputation of the "Ivy League of the underworld" in the late 1980s when it tapped a tough, savvy — and quite young — wiseguy to take over as acting boss. Liborio "Barney" Bellomo was only 30 when he stepped into the shoes of aging veteran Anthony "Fat Tony" Salerno after Salerno's conviction and 100-year sentence in the historic Commission case.

Today, at 50, Bellomo is still relatively young. And despite two federal raps and more than a decade in prison, he has proved his mob mettle and is giving the feds fits in their never-ending efforts to nail him for murder and put him away for life.

Charged with a 1998 mob rubout — the Justice Department thought long and hard before opting not to seek the death penalty — as well as racketeering and obstruction of justice, sources say Barney was recently offered an unheard of three-year plea deal by the feds for the obscure crime of misprision of felony. (Gang Land here expands your legal lexicon: Essentially it's knowing that a crime has been committed and not reporting it.)

Most wiseguys, even one like Bellomo, who is due to be released from prison next year, would take that deal in a New York minute — even if they were innocent. But sources say Barney, who has already served 11 years for two earlier plea deals, has tired of what his attorney calls "life on the installment plan" and has rejected the sweet offer.

His first plea deal — in which he took 10 years for two bid-rigging charges — came after he passed three polygraph exams in which he denied taking part in a 1991 murder that he had been charged with.

In recent days, after Gang Land began asking defense lawyers and the feds about the matter, sources say the Manhattan U.S. attorney's office decided to up the ante and hit Bellomo and his brother-in-law, Gerald Fiorino, with extortion charges going back to the 1980s. A revised indictment is expected to be unveiled today at a status conference before Judge Lewis Kaplan.

"He's like a folk hero in the MCC and the MDC, telling the feds to shove it," one mob lawyer said, referring to inmates at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, which Bellomo has called home since his indictment 16 months ago, and the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn.

Barney's bravado is based in large part on a decided lack of evidence against him. He was incarcerated two years before the murder victim, capo Ralph Coppola, was killed, and the main government witness — turncoat mob lawyer Peter Peluso — has made numerous conflicting statements about Bellomo's alleged involvement in the slaying.

As Gang Land reported six weeks ago, Peluso was tape-recorded several times absolving Bellomo of any role in the slaying during a long FBI investigation, once stating that if Barney had been out of prison, "he would have saved Ralphie … he would have tried."

Peluso, a longtime mob associate who for years served as a messenger for Salerno and other family leaders, has told authorities that he met Bellomo when the young mobster was 17 and had been arrested on a gun possession charge, for which he ultimately received three months' probation, according to an FBI report obtained by Gang Land.

Bellomo's father, a reputed Genovese soldier who was close to Salerno and would die from natural causes about a year later, had retained Peluso to represent his son, according to the report, a summary of a Peluso debriefing by agents and federal prosecutors.

Before he passed away from a lingering illness, the elder Bellomo asked "Fat Tony to look out" for his boy because he had no one "on the street other than his father" to watch out for him, Peluso said, according to the report.

"Salerno informed Bellomo's father that nothing would happen to Bellomo," said the report, which noted that the budding gangster was placed in the crew of an East Harlem capo who was close to Salerno and would later serve briefly as a family underboss, Saverio "Sammy Black" Santora.

"Barney remained Barney" until Santora died in 1987. Then, Barney began "doing what Sammy was doing, acting like he was running the show," Peluso said, adding that "it was a shock" to other wiseguys that young Barney "was calling the shots. … Talk on the street at the time was that Chin [Vincent Gigante] put Bellomo in charge of the family."

Peluso's account of Barney's early years jibes with earlier reports, including information from turncoat mobster Vincent "Fish" Cafaro, who cooperated in 1986. In a 1990 court affidavit, six years before Barney's first federal indictment — and three years before Gigante was hit with charges that would lead to his conviction in 1997 — noted federal mob investigator Kenneth McCabe named Bellomo as the family's acting boss.

When Gang Land asked how such a young gangster — Bellomo was 33 at the time — could reach the top of the powerful family, Mr. McCabe said simply, "He's the real deal."

Bellomo's attorney, Barry Levin, blamed his client's current legal problems on "Pete Peluso's story-telling abilities." He declined to discuss any details of his client's plea negotiations, stating: "He's not interested in accepting life on the installment plan from the government. The only thing on Barney's mind, other than his family, is to leave this country when he gets out so the FBI will leave him alone."

Still, Bellomo's taking a big gamble. If convicted of the murder at trial, he faces life.

Thus far, his tough stand seems to have emboldened his brother-in-law's resolve. Fiorino, who was overheard numerous times during the lengthy FBI probe in allegedly criminal discussions with Peluso and an indicted capo who died of cancer last year, John "Buster" Ardito, has rejected a plea deal of six to 12 months in prison, sources said.

Fiorino, 52, who faces racketeering charges that include extortion and money laundering, could get 20 years if convicted at trial. Fiorino's attorneys, Michael Rosen and Jean Graziano, also declined to discuss any plea talks, saying only that they were preparing for trial.

Sources said the new extortion charge against the brothers-in-law stemmed from a tape-recorded conversation in May 2004 during which Fiorino was overheard threatening the wife of a mob capo who refused to make good on a debt after her husband was incarcerated in an unrelated case.

Assistant U.S. attorneys Miriam Rocah, Eric Snyder, and Jonathan Kolodner declined to discuss the case.

In addition to Bellomo and Fiorino, capo Pasquale "Scop" DeLuca and soldiers Arthur Nigro and Ralph "The Undertaker" Balsamo also await trial in the case. DeLuca, 75, is charged with Coppola's murder and faces life. Nigro, 62, and Balsamo, 36, are charged with racketeering and face up to 20 years.

Twenty-nine other wiseguys, mob associates, and drug dealers have pleaded guilty to a variety of charges — or have agreed to plea bargains yet to be carried out — calling for sentences ranging from probation to 10 years.

This column and other news of organized crime will appear today at ganglandnews.com.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Camo » Tue Dec 05, 2017 1:01 pm

She is 96 so i'm guessing Barney's mother?

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Camo » Tue Dec 05, 2017 1:00 pm

Antiliar wrote: Tue Dec 05, 2017 12:45 pm You could have the right person, Camo. BellAmo could be a typo. I searched through Ancestry.com and this person's name didn't come up, but he is a better fit. I'll follow up on him and see if he's from Corleone.
I found a Lucy Bellomo from the same postcode as Salvotore Bellamo in The Bronx who is related to both Liborio G Bellomo and Liborio T Bellomo - https://radaris.com/~Lucy-Bellomo/1376800562

Could be a coincidence as i'm not sure how large that area is but that may be it.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Antiliar » Tue Dec 05, 2017 12:45 pm

You could have the right person, Camo. BellAmo could be a typo. I searched through Ancestry.com and this person's name didn't come up, but he is a better fit. I'll follow up on him and see if he's from Corleone.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Camo » Tue Dec 05, 2017 5:52 am

Nevermind i'm an idiot, missed that he is BellAmo not Bellomo. Was wondering why you guys hadn't found that. :lol:

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Camo » Tue Dec 05, 2017 4:56 am

There's one that was born 1915 who died 1980 last residence: the Bronx. That means he would have been 42 when Liborio was born and it's five years off that Capeci articles year, Liborio would have been 18 in 1975 but if it said "about 18" then it's possible Capeci was five years off:

https://www.familysearch.org/search/col ... id=1202535

Age: 65
Given Name: Salvatore
Middle Name:
Surname: Bellamo
Name Suffix:
Birth Date: 25 Apr 1915
State: New York
Last Place of Residence: Bronx, New York
Previous Residence Postal Code: 10465
Event Date: Jan 1980

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Frank » Mon Dec 04, 2017 10:40 pm

Antiliar wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2017 11:58 pm If you remember where you read that, please let me know. I could not find any Salvatore Bellomos who died in the 1970s. The closest I could find was one who died in 1987. This one was a veteran buried in a military cemetery in Suffolk County, New York.
The New York Sun May 3 2007 article by Capeci about Barney, Basically it says his dad died when Barney was about 18. Hope it helps you. I just searched under Salerno took care of Barney Bellomo.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Frank » Mon Dec 04, 2017 12:38 am

Antiliar wrote: Sun Dec 03, 2017 11:58 pm If you remember where you read that, please let me know. I could not find any Salvatore Bellomos who died in the 1970s. The closest I could find was one who died in 1987. This one was a veteran buried in a military cemetery in Suffolk County, New York.
Ok I'll get back to you tomorrow.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Antiliar » Sun Dec 03, 2017 11:58 pm

If you remember where you read that, please let me know. I could not find any Salvatore Bellomos who died in the 1970s. The closest I could find was one who died in 1987. This one was a veteran buried in a military cemetery in Suffolk County, New York.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Frank » Sun Dec 03, 2017 11:04 pm

From what I remember reading that his dad died in the 70s or 80s.Salerno or the Chin promised his dad that they would look out for Barney.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Antiliar » Sun Dec 03, 2017 5:37 pm

There were several Salvatore Bellomos listed, so without further identifying information, we don't who is the correct one.

Re: Liborio "Barney" Bellomo

by Charlie » Sun Dec 03, 2017 8:08 am

I think his father died in the 70's

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