More North Jersey stuff from the Stanfa regime
Attanasio and Cifelli’s health problems:
Philadelphia Inquirer 09 Sep 1993
Scarfo’s son pleads guilty
George Anastasia
Reputed mob soldiers Vincent Centorino, John Praino and Nicholas Olivieri also entered guilty pleas to conspiracy charges. All three admitted their involvement in illegal gambling operations ranging from card games to bookmaking and numbers writing. Each faces a maximum five-year prison sentence under the terms of the plea bargain.
[…]
Still awaiting trial are Anthony “Tony Buck” Piccolo, Joseph “Scoops” Licata and Nicholas Cifelli. Another defendant, Anthony Attanasio, has had his case separated from the others for medical reasons and will stand trial at a later date.
Cifelli, who suffers from cancer of the lungs and sternum, according to his lawyer, is also seeking a medical severance.
Cifelli and Licata plead guilty Sep 1993:
Philadelphia Inquirer 15 Sep 1993
Two plead guilty in alleged mob ring
Maureen Graham
Yesterday’s plea agreement was struck after Superior Court Judge Isaiah Steinberg denied a motion that Cifelli be tried separately for health reasons.
Cifelli, 71, suffers from cancer of the lungs and sternum and has about a year to live, his lawyer Brian Belson said yesterday. Belson said he would argue in court for a reduced sentence based on Cifelli’s condition.
Cifelli pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit racketeering and faces seven years in prison. In exchange for his guilty plea, the state dropped five related gambling charges and an additional gambling charge that Cifelli faces in Essex County, according to Buckley.
Olivieri, Praino and Centorino sentenced 1993:
Philadelphia Daily News 20 Nov 1993
7 years for young Scarfo
Joseph R Daughen
Sentenced to four years each on the same charge as Scarfo were Nicholas A. Olivieri, 46, of Bloomfield, N.J., and John Praino, 58, of the Bronx, N.Y. All three were fined $2,500.
Sentenced to four years on Oct. 29 for his guilty plea in the same charges was Vincent “Beepsie” Centorino, 63, of Far Hills, N.J. Awaiting sentence are Joseph “Scoops” Licata, 52, of Florham Park, N.J., and Nicholas “Turk” Cifelli, 71, of Newark.
Plot to murder George Fresolone’s brother:
Philadelphia Inquirer 25 Jan 1994
Documents: mob wanted informant’s brother dead
George Anastasia
Licata, a member of the Nicodemo Scarfo organized-crime family, and Perna, a Lucchese crime-family soldier, plotted the murder of Fresolone’s brother, according to the affidavit, which is based on an interview Marchalonis conducted in October with mobster-turned-informant Thomas Ricciardi.
[…]
Ricciardi said that Perna said he and Licata were “going to whack Fresolone’s brother.” Ricciardi, however, said he told Perna that they “shouldn’t hurt someone who never did anything to hurt them,” according Marchalonis’ sworn statement.
Licata identified as a capo and sentenced on a gambling charge:
Philadelphia Inquirer 04 Feb 1994
Mob boss sentenced for bookmaking ring
George Anastasia
Admitted mob boss Joseph “Scoops” Licata, a captain in Nicodemo Scarfo’s crime family, was sentenced to 37 months in prison yesterday after having been convicted of running what authorities said was one of the largest bookmaking rings in the country.
Licata sentenced on racketeering charge:
Philadelphia Inquirer 11 Feb 1994
Mob boss sentenced to 14 years
George Anastasia
Mob leader Joseph Licata, who, authorities charge, headed the North Jersey branch of the Nicodemo Scarfo crime family, was sentenced to 14 years in prison yesterday.
Licata had admitted heading a loan-sharking and gambling ring for the Scarfo organization in the late 1980s.
Camden County Superior Court Judge Isaiah Steinberg imposed consecutive seven-year sentences on Licata, 52, who had pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit racketeering and to being a leader of organized crime.
Licata, who was sentenced to 37 months in prison on a federal gambling charge last week, was not in court yesterday. A court official said Licata was en route to a federal prison at the time.
Steinberg ordered that Licata’s state sentence run concurrently with his federal prison term.
By the end of the Stanfa era the North Jersey crew was really hammered by LE. Centorino, Praino, Olivieri, Cifelli (who also seemed close to death at the time, which would explain why we hear nothing from him after this - and clearly I was wrong when I assumed he was younger and died in 2014), Licata and Joseph Sodano (finishing up his two-year sentence) were all confirmed doing time. Attanasio was terminally ill, and likely inactive, and Ralph Napoli was retired after being taken down by Stanfa. Joseph Bellina and Fulvio Capozzi were either dead or soon to be dead (I haven’t found obituaries for either but I’ve seen reference to a ‘late’ Fulvio A Capozzi from 1996) and Gerardo Fusella was possibly locked up for the murders of Albert Meglia and David White, or other crimes. Dominick DiNorscio could have been possibly inactive as well due to his age and the lack of references to him after the Scarfo era. So, by Feb 1994 the only active members in North Jersey may have been Peter Caprio and Michael Ricciardi, a sharp contrast from the number of active members a few years earlier.