Bonanno and Genovese mobsters and L.I. cop busted for racketeering charges in lucrative gambling ring
Moderator: Capos
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
That's the Polito that was said Barney has a soft spot for
https://af11.wordpress.com/2020/01/19/p ... y-bellomo/
https://af11.wordpress.com/2020/01/19/p ... y-bellomo/
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
Yeah, it's the same guy. The NYT got the age wrong.
viewtopic.php?p=235976#p235976
He's the main reason Polito is still alive.Tonyd621 wrote: ↑Tue Aug 16, 2022 1:31 pm That's the Polito that was said Barney has a soft spot for
https://af11.wordpress.com/2020/01/19/p ... y-bellomo/
Last edited by eboli on Tue Aug 16, 2022 2:01 pm, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
Capeci said in that GL article from 2020 that Polito had been inducted within the last two years. That doesn't appear to be the case from reading the indictment.
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
I believe Polito is with John Brescio. Wonder if this is a one off case, or a harbinger of something larger. Just gambling, so can’t imagine these guys will get hit too hard (though, look at Boobsie, and what he got after trial conviction).
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Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
U should see some of the ones in les or Chinatown
Literally hole in the wall random stores that I can’t ever see business being done
Of course that’s almost ten years back now
HANG IT UP NICKY. ITS TIME TO GO HOME.
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
Just posted a picture of pipitone after the arrest in the mug shot section
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Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
gambling charges is what's called scrapping the bottom of the barrel. They can't find drug dealing, a hit , turn someone facing heavy charges? This is all bullshit.
Bonanno and Genovese mobsters and L.I. cop busted for racketeering charges in lucrative gambling ring
https://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/ny ... story.html
The law enforcement takedown of a lucrative gambling ring shared by two Mafia families hooked a crooked Long Island cop and eight mobsters — including a guy known as “Joe Fish,” authorities said Tuesday.
Genovese soldier Joseph Marcario was charged along with four crime family colleagues and three members of the Bonanno family for running the betting business from inside legitimate Queens and Long Island businesses across the past decade, the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office announced.
Nassau County Detective Hector Rosario, 49, of Mineola, L.I., was also charged with taking cash from the Bonannos in return for arranging raids against competing illegal betting parlors — including one based in a rival Genovese-run shoe repair outlet, court papers showed.
“The defendants tried to hide their criminal activities from behind the cover of a coffee bar, a soccer club and a shoe repair store, but our office and our law enforcement partners exposed their illegal operations,” said Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Breon Peace in announcing the arrests.
“Even more disturbing is the shameful conduct of a detective who betrayed his oath of office ... when he allegedly aligned himself with criminals,” Peace said.
Court documents indicated the two organized crime families, in an unusual arrangement, collaborated on collecting some $10,000 in weekly bets at the Gran Caffe coffee shop in Lynbrook, L.I.
enovese acting capo Carmelo “Carmine” Polito was additionally charged with operating an illegal online betting operation where deadbeat gamblers faced a beatdown or worse.
“Tell him I’m going to put him under the f-----g bridge,” Polito told an associate to warn one debtor in 2019, the court papers charged.
Authorities said Polito’s rap sheet includes a bank robbery conspiracy and a conviction — later overturned — for planning the murders of two Genovese family associates in Brooklyn on Nov. 30, 1994.
Genovese defendant Joseph ”Joe Box” Rutigliano, 63, of Commack, L.I., was the only one of the suspects to avoid arrest in the Tuesday sweep, and he remained on the lam, according to authorities.
Rutigliano was identified as the bagman for the family’s illicit earnings, collecting the money with co-defendant Salvatore ”Sal the Shoemaker” Rubino, 58, and delivering the cash to higher-ranking members.
Bonanno defendant Vito Pipitone, 40, was arrested in Wellington, Fla., while his older brother Anthony “Little Anthony” Pipitone, 49, of Deer Park, L.I., was busted locally in the operation where the cash was laundered through secret money transfers, authorities said.
The Pipitone brothers pleaded guilty in 2010 to stabbing two teenagers they thought vandalized a Mafia-connected Queens restaurant in 2004.
Vito Pipitone’s Hawaiian honeymoon was cut short when he was indicted in the knifings. He was sentenced 3½ years for the crime.
His older brother Anthony served more than 3½ years for the stabbing in Whitestone. While on supervised release in 2016, he earned himself another two years in the federal slammer for attending the Bonanno crime family’s annual Christmas party in Staten Island.
Defendant Agostino Gabriele, 35, of Queens, picked up the cash for the Bonanno higherups, authorities charged.
Detective Rosario, under questioning by the FBI, provided false information in denying any connection to the Bonanno family, the court papers charged.
In addition to the shared cafe operation, the two families family ran their own gambling dens, mostly in local social clubs, authorities said.
Evidence assembled by prosecutors included court-ordered wiretaps, testimony from cooperating witnesses and physical evidence, authorities said.
“This case is further proof that organized crime is alive and well,” said Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly. “These violent criminal organizations operated secret underground gambling parlors in local commercial establishments ... assisted by a sworn member of law enforcement.”
Last April, a Florida-based Genovese family captain and five associates were busted on racketeering charges for running a decade-old illegal gambling operation where losing bettors faced extortion or threats of violence.
The law enforcement takedown of a lucrative gambling ring shared by two Mafia families hooked a crooked Long Island cop and eight mobsters — including a guy known as “Joe Fish,” authorities said Tuesday.
Genovese soldier Joseph Marcario was charged along with four crime family colleagues and three members of the Bonanno family for running the betting business from inside legitimate Queens and Long Island businesses across the past decade, the Brooklyn U.S. attorney’s office announced.
Nassau County Detective Hector Rosario, 49, of Mineola, L.I., was also charged with taking cash from the Bonannos in return for arranging raids against competing illegal betting parlors — including one based in a rival Genovese-run shoe repair outlet, court papers showed.
“The defendants tried to hide their criminal activities from behind the cover of a coffee bar, a soccer club and a shoe repair store, but our office and our law enforcement partners exposed their illegal operations,” said Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Breon Peace in announcing the arrests.
“Even more disturbing is the shameful conduct of a detective who betrayed his oath of office ... when he allegedly aligned himself with criminals,” Peace said.
Court documents indicated the two organized crime families, in an unusual arrangement, collaborated on collecting some $10,000 in weekly bets at the Gran Caffe coffee shop in Lynbrook, L.I.
enovese acting capo Carmelo “Carmine” Polito was additionally charged with operating an illegal online betting operation where deadbeat gamblers faced a beatdown or worse.
“Tell him I’m going to put him under the f-----g bridge,” Polito told an associate to warn one debtor in 2019, the court papers charged.
Authorities said Polito’s rap sheet includes a bank robbery conspiracy and a conviction — later overturned — for planning the murders of two Genovese family associates in Brooklyn on Nov. 30, 1994.
Genovese defendant Joseph ”Joe Box” Rutigliano, 63, of Commack, L.I., was the only one of the suspects to avoid arrest in the Tuesday sweep, and he remained on the lam, according to authorities.
Rutigliano was identified as the bagman for the family’s illicit earnings, collecting the money with co-defendant Salvatore ”Sal the Shoemaker” Rubino, 58, and delivering the cash to higher-ranking members.
Bonanno defendant Vito Pipitone, 40, was arrested in Wellington, Fla., while his older brother Anthony “Little Anthony” Pipitone, 49, of Deer Park, L.I., was busted locally in the operation where the cash was laundered through secret money transfers, authorities said.
The Pipitone brothers pleaded guilty in 2010 to stabbing two teenagers they thought vandalized a Mafia-connected Queens restaurant in 2004.
Vito Pipitone’s Hawaiian honeymoon was cut short when he was indicted in the knifings. He was sentenced 3½ years for the crime.
His older brother Anthony served more than 3½ years for the stabbing in Whitestone. While on supervised release in 2016, he earned himself another two years in the federal slammer for attending the Bonanno crime family’s annual Christmas party in Staten Island.
Defendant Agostino Gabriele, 35, of Queens, picked up the cash for the Bonanno higherups, authorities charged.
Detective Rosario, under questioning by the FBI, provided false information in denying any connection to the Bonanno family, the court papers charged.
In addition to the shared cafe operation, the two families family ran their own gambling dens, mostly in local social clubs, authorities said.
Evidence assembled by prosecutors included court-ordered wiretaps, testimony from cooperating witnesses and physical evidence, authorities said.
“This case is further proof that organized crime is alive and well,” said Nassau County District Attorney Anne Donnelly. “These violent criminal organizations operated secret underground gambling parlors in local commercial establishments ... assisted by a sworn member of law enforcement.”
Last April, a Florida-based Genovese family captain and five associates were busted on racketeering charges for running a decade-old illegal gambling operation where losing bettors faced extortion or threats of violence.
Re: Bonanno and Genovese mobsters and L.I. cop busted for racketeering charges in lucrative gambling ring
apologies I didn't see this was posted earlier
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Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
The Genovese and Bonanno families are finished.
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It's a new morning in America... fresh, vital. The old cynicism is gone. We have faith in our leaders. We're optimistic as to what becomes of it all. It really boils down to our ability to accept. We don't need pessimism. There are no limits.
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Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
Another swing and miss at Barney.
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
You are being sarcastic right? From gambling charges?Pogo The Clown wrote: ↑Tue Aug 16, 2022 5:44 pm The Genovese and Bonanno families are finished.
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Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
Pipitone
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Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
This guy Barney is an enigma wtf
Re: Bonanno and Genovese Bust today
When they say "operated out of" are they just meaning that's the business they used to wash money or do these guys actually conduct their business and take action in these places?