Gangland - 7/26/18
Moderator: Capos
Gangland - 7/26/18
This Week in Gang Land By Jerry Capeci
Next Address For A Key Government Witness: Back-Seat Of His Car
Lester Zullo was a key player in an almost comical Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight event when he ran with a violent Luchese family crew back in 1992. But nine years later, he had two serious problems: a federal indictment, and throat cancer. So he agreed to flip. He got a new identity in the Witness Protection Program, and quietly helped send a bunch of Luchese mobsters to prison for murder and racketeering.
The government never called him, but Zullo was all set to testify against NYPD rogue detectives, Louis Eppolitto and Steve Caracappa, the so-called Mafia Cops who carried out hits and fingered targets for Luchese underboss Anthony (Gaspipe) Casso.
But that was a long time ago. These days, mobster Joseph (Joey Flowers) Tangorra, and all the other wiseguys and mob associates who Zullo helped send to prison, have been released. And Zullo, 67, who was disabled when he joined Team America, is forgotten history, like water under the bridge, as far as the feds are concerned. His wife, also 67, is also disabled and suffers her own medical ailments.
Their government funding — about $3100 a month — was cut off in June of 2014. The move came after Zullo was assured — year after year — that wouldn't happen, the ex-gangster told Gang Land. The couple have little to fall back on: Their savings from a malpractice award Zullo got for faulty laryngeal surgery to remove his voice box is almost gone. Their disability and social security payments barely cover their rent.
Their monthly rent where they've lived for 17 years is currently $1421. Their combined monthly income from disability and social security is $1740.
"In less than a few months," Zullo rasped, speaking with the aid of a mechanical voice box, "we'll be living in a car."
It wasn't a difficult decision for Zullo to decide to cooperate. He and six others, including then-capo Tangorra, then-acting underboss Eugene (Boobsie) Castelle, and soldiers John (Big John) Castellucci and Scott Gervasi were hit with racketeering charges in December of 2000.
At the time, Zullo had already been diagnosed with cancer and was suffering serious after-effects from having his voice box removed. The feds were also looking to put him away as a shooter in the fouled-up hit he and Tangorra had attempted. Zullo, aiming at their target from the top step of a Brooklyn apartment building, mistakenly hit Tangorra in the back when Joey Flowers suddenly appeared at the bottom of the stairs. In hindsight, it's obvious they were both at fault, but Zullo took the weight, likely because it was the wounded Tangorra who shot and maimed their victim.
Within days of his arrest, according to court records, Zullo, who was indicted as "Lester Ellis," a name he often used, pleaded guilty. He was released on bail, secured by an annuity he got for his malpractice award. He soon began fingering codefendants and other cohorts in the Luchese and Genovese families for a slew of crimes, including murder, arson and drug dealing.
His cooperation was "outstanding" in helping prosecutors convict many members of a "violent Bensonhurst Crew" that used a series of store fronts, a social club, and an off-track betting parlor to operate a 13-year-long racketeering enterprise, former Brooklyn federal prosecutor William Gurin wrote in an August 14, 2006 sentencing memo that detailed Zullo's cooperation.
In addition to "being an important factor in convincing" his codefendants to plead guilty rather than go to trial, Zullo gave the FBI and NYPD "significant information concerning criminal activity" by more than a dozen mobsters and associates, including Eppolito and Caracappa, Gurin wrote.
Two of those named by Zullo, Boobsie Castelle, 58, and his brother, Big John Castellucci, 59, did about seven and four years respectively in the case. The prison stretches apparently did not change their criminal ways: The two are now facing new racketeering charges in Manhattan. Tangorra, 69, got 16 years in a plea deal for the 1988 murder of a suspected informer, and the 1992 attempted murder of the victim Zullo missed. Joey Flowers got out of prison in 2014, the same year Zullo told Gang Land that the government had cut his funding.
Uncle Sam's manner in cutting him off, according to Zullo, was cruel and unusual punishment. It came shortly after he was diagnosed with another form of throat cancer, and had spent two months on a feeding tube, following a 10-hour-long operation during which doctors "took veins, arteries and flesh from my arm to rebuild my throat."
The U.S. Marshals Service and the Department of Justice's Office of Enforcement Operations, (OEO) which oversees what is officially called the Witness Security Program about Zullo's account did not return calls about Ellis-Zullo's complaints. That's not surprising since the New York FBI doesn't return Gang Land's calls about arrests that it made yesterday, let alone deals it cut with wiseguys decades ago. You wouldn't know it from the DOJ website, however: It proudly states that the agency has relocated and protected more than 8600 witnesses since 1971.
Zullo's lawyer, Jeremy Gutman, also didn't respond to numerous requests for comment. That didn't surprise Zullo who told us: "He's scared of his shadow and won't call you back, even though I told him to." Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Geddes, whom Zullo stated "did everything she could but struck out," did call back but declined all comment.
Zullo isn't the first protected witness to cry foul to Gang Land. But he's the first one to speak out publicly, and back up many of his claims with emails and texts he's gotten over the years, and declare: "Everything I've said is true. I can back up a lot of it, and they can't disprove anything."
Zullo's first inkling that something was amiss came in June of 2013, when he got a letter stating that OEO was reviewing the funding he'd been receiving since he entered the so-called WitSec program in 2001 as a disabled witness.
"When I first came in, I was told that in cases where people like me who were disabled there were exceptions made and we wouldn't have to worry," Zullo recalled. But he and his wife were worried so he reached out to the deputy marshal who'd been his contact from the get-go. The deputy told Zullo to relax.
"EVERYBODY in program getting ltr regarding termination of funding, 90 percent not term from funding due to unique circumstances, u have those circumstances, but ltr needs to be served on ALL," reads the text that Zullo received at 4:35 pm on June 19, 2013.
Five months later, in November, Zullo was diagnosed with a cancer of the pharynx, a tube inside the neck that runs from behind the nose to the top of the windpipe. After doctors dealt with blockages in two arteries and nodules on his lungs that showed up in CT scans, Zullo underwent pharyngeal surgery in February of 2014.
Don't Worry Text"This was a big operation," said Zullo. "My left forearm was used for the donor site. That's where they took the veins and arteries and flesh to use to rebuild my throat. I have limited use of that arm. I was on a feeding tube for about two months."
Since he had entered the WitSec program "already disabled from cancer of the larynx" and survived a second bout with throat cancer, Zullo decided to look at the bright side, he recalled. "I figured for sure now that since I just had cancer again at my age, I should really not have to worry about losing the funding. But come June 2014, two months after they removed the feeding tubes and the cast on my arm, they came and told me funding was over. June was my last check."
By then, his original deputy marshal contact had retired, said Zullo. "So what he told me all along about being 'a lifer' — that was the term he used — and not to worry about the re-evaluations in 2013 was BS. We thought he was a good guy but he told us we would never have to worry about funding because of our disabilities. And this was before I was diagnosed with cancer again later that year. We were told when we got old we'd be put in 'assisted living' as long as our monthly stipend covered it."
Gerald Shur, who ran the WPP from 1971 to 1995, told Gang Land "there were disabled people while I was running the program, and we took care of them. We didn't take care of them in the style they may have liked, but in a manner that was commensurate and appropriate to the community where they were living."
The funds used for that purpose during his tenure, and in 2018, said Shur, are in a "special fund that is allocated to maintain witnesses and is administered by the Marshals Service."
Gerald ShurShur stressed that the primary purpose of every deputy marshal to his witness "is to keep him alive." But Shur acknowledged that they also have a vast network of state and local community contacts who can assist in getting welfare, food stamps, rent money, and other benefits for relocated witnesses — and that they are supposed to use them, provided the witness doesn't return to his criminal ways.
"I haven't even got a parking ticket since I've been in the program," said Zullo.
Shur said there is also a grievance process, during which "OEO serves as sort of an ombudsman" for witnesses. They have the ability to appeal decisions by a deputy, or by the U.S. Marshals Service, and he opined that sometimes it's a good idea to hire a "young, aggressive Legal Aid lawyer."
Since his funding was canceled, Zullo has had two new deputy marshals as contacts.
His first one, a woman, "told me to go sleep in a church if I had no place to go," he said.
Instead, in order to pay his rent, he decided to cash in an annuity worth $148,000 that he had wanted to keep as an insurance policy if he died. Because it was in his prior name, he had to use his new deputy to do that. He said it cost him $30,000 in fees — and more than six months — for him to get a one lump sum. After paying $20,000 in credit card and other debts, the $98,000 he netted is almost gone, he said.
To help make ends meet, Zullo said his wife of 44 years sold her engagement ring and other jewelry she had.
Zullo said that in November of 2015 his second replacement deputy marshal and his supervisor "came to the house and said it looked like we'd be funded again and he would let me know in a couple of weeks but he never called back."
Under urging from AUSA Geddes, who promised to vouch for his needs, Zullo filed an appeal with OEO. After waiting nearly a year, he lost that too.
A few days after Gang Land called Geddes and Gutman and began looking into Zullo's complaint, his deputy marshal called and left him a voice mail message.
"I just wanted to ask you," he said, "Are you guys planning on moving to a new apartment? They would like to know whether you guys are moving."
Mr. and Mrs. Zullo may have to move, but it won't be to a new apartment.
"We will be homeless soon," Zullo said. "We will be penniless soon. In less than a few months, we'll be living in a 2011 Kia Forte."
Stevie Junior Crea Hopes Fourth Try For Bail Is A Charm
Luchese gangster Steven D. (Stevie Junior) Crea has a new pair of lawyers who are taking dead aim at a series of embarrassing omissions and outright fibs that they say federal prosecutors have used to keep their client locked up as he awaits trial on murder charges.
In court papers filed this month seeking Crea's release on bail, veteran attorneys Joseph DiBenedetto and Seth Ginsberg blast prosecutors for failing to alert Judge Cathy Seibel back in January that their star witness had concocted an earlier phony story about the murder of former Purple Gang leader Michael Meldish.
Gang Land has identified the story-spinning witness as Frank Pasqua III, a drug dealer who reputedly ran with the younger Crea and his powerful dad, Luchese underboss Steven (Stevie Wonder) Crea, who is also charged with the Meldish rubout. Pasqua originally told the feds back in 2015 a bizarre tale of how his own dad — Frank Pasqua Jr. — shot and killed Meldish without warning on a Bronx street in 2013 as his son stood a few feet away.
Pasqua III has since admitted that he made up that version, but now says that Stevie Junior Crea told him that the Meldish hit was "sanctioned" by the Luchese family.
After other phony stories by prosecutors surfaced, Seibel warned the prosecutors at a bail hearing in January "to be very careful" about claims they make to keep the accused gangster behind bars. But lawyers DiBenedetto and Ginsberg say the feds are still playing fast and loose with the truth by not alerting the judge to their witness's earlier false account.
The lawyers noted that "the government has indicated that (Pasqua III) is its principal witness against Crea with respect to the Meldish murder" but failed to alert the court about his false account of the murder. The defense attorneys also claim that that Pasqua III is what they called a "stone-cold junkie" who "routinely beat his wife in front of their children" and who was "also physically abusive to his mom."
Stating that the information about Pasqua III was a "disturbing revelation" that undermines Crea's detention as a danger to the community, his attorneys have asked Seibel, who sits in White Plains Federal Court, to release their client, who has no prior arrests and has been held without bail for more than a year.
"It is difficult to fathom how the government can justify its failure to inform the Court of this crucial evidence" at Crea's bail hearing in January, "particularly in light of the Court's clear directive" to be "very careful, and if careful means that you can't make the showing, so be it," DiBenedetto and Ginsberg wrote.
Although Seibel agreed to keep Crea detained at the January hearing, she told prosecutors not to "take a lot of comfort in my ruling. This was not cool." She also warned them to be sure that"going forward everything is going to be double and triple checked before representations are made." Despite that caution, the defense lawyers wrote, the "government brazenly stood silent" about Pasqua III's erroneous claims that his father had killed Meldish.
The judge ordered prosecutors Scott Hartman, Jacqueline Kelly and Hagan Scotten to respond to Crea's motion on Monday, and scheduled a fourth bail hearing for next Friday.
Along with the Creas, aging former Luchese former street boss Matthew (Matty) Madonna, soldier Chris Londonio, and associate Terrence Caldwell are charged with racketeering and the November 15, 2013 murder of Meldish, who was shot to death as he sat in the front seat of his car in the Throggs Neck section of the Bronx.
Judge Puts Rooster In A Cage For 30 Months
Aging Genovese capo Eugene (Rooster) Onofrio gave some very kind fatherly advice against becoming a made man to a mob associate who was pushing to be sponsored for induction into the powerful crime family four years ago. If the 76-year-old wiseguy had taken his own advice decades ago, he likely wouldn't be looking at beginning a 30-month stretch behind bars in September.
"I love you to death like a son," Onofrio said loudly and clearly to John (J.R) Rubeo back on July 14, 2014. "You got a wife, a child, you got one coming," said Onofrio. "This life is not for a guy like you."
"I live it anyways, so what's the difference?" replied Rubeo.
At the time, Rubeo was about midway through the five year undercover sting that would nail 45 mob connected defendants from five families for a variety of crimes and he was recording every kindly word Onofrio spoke.
Moments earlier the wired-up snitch had bragged to Rooster that his official mob superior, capo Pasquale (Patsy) Parrello, had told Rubeo that he "was the smartest fucking guy that he ever met."
But Onofrio, who was obviously snookered by Rubeo, was trying to do a favor for J.R., 30 some odd years his junior and a contemporary of his own son. So he continued: "You met my son? I love him to death. I know he's good. My kid's name (comes) up, in a heartbeat, I would never put him in."
The government submitted the tape recording to show that Onofrio was not an old man who had retired from criminal activity in 1999 when he got out of prison the last time, but a powerful capo who oversaw two mob crews and deserved a sentence between 27 and 33 months, as called for in his plea agreement.
In the taped conversation, Onofrio referred to himself as a skipper who ran the crime family's Springfield, Massachusetts crew, and told Rubeo that he was going to sponsor a "gangster" who's "got balls and a heart" for induction so that he could be Rooster's eyes and ears in Springfield and save him from traveling from his home "in New Haven to Springfield all the time."
Manhattan Federal Judge Richard Sullivan rejected Onofrio's lawyer's pitch that there was "no need to incarcerate" his old and ailing client and sentenced the Rooster to 30 months in prison for loansharking and the sale of untaxed cigarettes, recommending "strongly" that he serve his time at the federal prison hospital in Ayer Massachusetts.
Even so, Onofrio did much better than he would have if he'd gone ahead and copped a plea deal last November with maximum sentencing guidelines of 57 months, two months before he and Philadelphia mob boss Joseph (Skinny Joey) Merlino were slated for trial. After the proceeding had begun, Rooster changed his mind and walked out of the courtroom.
Merlino, whose trial ended in a hung jury, faces the music on September 13, five days before Onofrio is slated to begin serving his sentence. No matter what, Skinny Joey is guaranteed to fare better than Rooster.
Skinny Joey pleaded guilty in April to minor gambling charges with sentencing guidelines between 10 and 16 months, and a maximum prison term capped at two years in prison.
Next Address For A Key Government Witness: Back-Seat Of His Car
Lester Zullo was a key player in an almost comical Gang That Couldn't Shoot Straight event when he ran with a violent Luchese family crew back in 1992. But nine years later, he had two serious problems: a federal indictment, and throat cancer. So he agreed to flip. He got a new identity in the Witness Protection Program, and quietly helped send a bunch of Luchese mobsters to prison for murder and racketeering.
The government never called him, but Zullo was all set to testify against NYPD rogue detectives, Louis Eppolitto and Steve Caracappa, the so-called Mafia Cops who carried out hits and fingered targets for Luchese underboss Anthony (Gaspipe) Casso.
But that was a long time ago. These days, mobster Joseph (Joey Flowers) Tangorra, and all the other wiseguys and mob associates who Zullo helped send to prison, have been released. And Zullo, 67, who was disabled when he joined Team America, is forgotten history, like water under the bridge, as far as the feds are concerned. His wife, also 67, is also disabled and suffers her own medical ailments.
Their government funding — about $3100 a month — was cut off in June of 2014. The move came after Zullo was assured — year after year — that wouldn't happen, the ex-gangster told Gang Land. The couple have little to fall back on: Their savings from a malpractice award Zullo got for faulty laryngeal surgery to remove his voice box is almost gone. Their disability and social security payments barely cover their rent.
Their monthly rent where they've lived for 17 years is currently $1421. Their combined monthly income from disability and social security is $1740.
"In less than a few months," Zullo rasped, speaking with the aid of a mechanical voice box, "we'll be living in a car."
It wasn't a difficult decision for Zullo to decide to cooperate. He and six others, including then-capo Tangorra, then-acting underboss Eugene (Boobsie) Castelle, and soldiers John (Big John) Castellucci and Scott Gervasi were hit with racketeering charges in December of 2000.
At the time, Zullo had already been diagnosed with cancer and was suffering serious after-effects from having his voice box removed. The feds were also looking to put him away as a shooter in the fouled-up hit he and Tangorra had attempted. Zullo, aiming at their target from the top step of a Brooklyn apartment building, mistakenly hit Tangorra in the back when Joey Flowers suddenly appeared at the bottom of the stairs. In hindsight, it's obvious they were both at fault, but Zullo took the weight, likely because it was the wounded Tangorra who shot and maimed their victim.
Within days of his arrest, according to court records, Zullo, who was indicted as "Lester Ellis," a name he often used, pleaded guilty. He was released on bail, secured by an annuity he got for his malpractice award. He soon began fingering codefendants and other cohorts in the Luchese and Genovese families for a slew of crimes, including murder, arson and drug dealing.
His cooperation was "outstanding" in helping prosecutors convict many members of a "violent Bensonhurst Crew" that used a series of store fronts, a social club, and an off-track betting parlor to operate a 13-year-long racketeering enterprise, former Brooklyn federal prosecutor William Gurin wrote in an August 14, 2006 sentencing memo that detailed Zullo's cooperation.
In addition to "being an important factor in convincing" his codefendants to plead guilty rather than go to trial, Zullo gave the FBI and NYPD "significant information concerning criminal activity" by more than a dozen mobsters and associates, including Eppolito and Caracappa, Gurin wrote.
Two of those named by Zullo, Boobsie Castelle, 58, and his brother, Big John Castellucci, 59, did about seven and four years respectively in the case. The prison stretches apparently did not change their criminal ways: The two are now facing new racketeering charges in Manhattan. Tangorra, 69, got 16 years in a plea deal for the 1988 murder of a suspected informer, and the 1992 attempted murder of the victim Zullo missed. Joey Flowers got out of prison in 2014, the same year Zullo told Gang Land that the government had cut his funding.
Uncle Sam's manner in cutting him off, according to Zullo, was cruel and unusual punishment. It came shortly after he was diagnosed with another form of throat cancer, and had spent two months on a feeding tube, following a 10-hour-long operation during which doctors "took veins, arteries and flesh from my arm to rebuild my throat."
The U.S. Marshals Service and the Department of Justice's Office of Enforcement Operations, (OEO) which oversees what is officially called the Witness Security Program about Zullo's account did not return calls about Ellis-Zullo's complaints. That's not surprising since the New York FBI doesn't return Gang Land's calls about arrests that it made yesterday, let alone deals it cut with wiseguys decades ago. You wouldn't know it from the DOJ website, however: It proudly states that the agency has relocated and protected more than 8600 witnesses since 1971.
Zullo's lawyer, Jeremy Gutman, also didn't respond to numerous requests for comment. That didn't surprise Zullo who told us: "He's scared of his shadow and won't call you back, even though I told him to." Assistant U.S. Attorney Elizabeth Geddes, whom Zullo stated "did everything she could but struck out," did call back but declined all comment.
Zullo isn't the first protected witness to cry foul to Gang Land. But he's the first one to speak out publicly, and back up many of his claims with emails and texts he's gotten over the years, and declare: "Everything I've said is true. I can back up a lot of it, and they can't disprove anything."
Zullo's first inkling that something was amiss came in June of 2013, when he got a letter stating that OEO was reviewing the funding he'd been receiving since he entered the so-called WitSec program in 2001 as a disabled witness.
"When I first came in, I was told that in cases where people like me who were disabled there were exceptions made and we wouldn't have to worry," Zullo recalled. But he and his wife were worried so he reached out to the deputy marshal who'd been his contact from the get-go. The deputy told Zullo to relax.
"EVERYBODY in program getting ltr regarding termination of funding, 90 percent not term from funding due to unique circumstances, u have those circumstances, but ltr needs to be served on ALL," reads the text that Zullo received at 4:35 pm on June 19, 2013.
Five months later, in November, Zullo was diagnosed with a cancer of the pharynx, a tube inside the neck that runs from behind the nose to the top of the windpipe. After doctors dealt with blockages in two arteries and nodules on his lungs that showed up in CT scans, Zullo underwent pharyngeal surgery in February of 2014.
Don't Worry Text"This was a big operation," said Zullo. "My left forearm was used for the donor site. That's where they took the veins and arteries and flesh to use to rebuild my throat. I have limited use of that arm. I was on a feeding tube for about two months."
Since he had entered the WitSec program "already disabled from cancer of the larynx" and survived a second bout with throat cancer, Zullo decided to look at the bright side, he recalled. "I figured for sure now that since I just had cancer again at my age, I should really not have to worry about losing the funding. But come June 2014, two months after they removed the feeding tubes and the cast on my arm, they came and told me funding was over. June was my last check."
By then, his original deputy marshal contact had retired, said Zullo. "So what he told me all along about being 'a lifer' — that was the term he used — and not to worry about the re-evaluations in 2013 was BS. We thought he was a good guy but he told us we would never have to worry about funding because of our disabilities. And this was before I was diagnosed with cancer again later that year. We were told when we got old we'd be put in 'assisted living' as long as our monthly stipend covered it."
Gerald Shur, who ran the WPP from 1971 to 1995, told Gang Land "there were disabled people while I was running the program, and we took care of them. We didn't take care of them in the style they may have liked, but in a manner that was commensurate and appropriate to the community where they were living."
The funds used for that purpose during his tenure, and in 2018, said Shur, are in a "special fund that is allocated to maintain witnesses and is administered by the Marshals Service."
Gerald ShurShur stressed that the primary purpose of every deputy marshal to his witness "is to keep him alive." But Shur acknowledged that they also have a vast network of state and local community contacts who can assist in getting welfare, food stamps, rent money, and other benefits for relocated witnesses — and that they are supposed to use them, provided the witness doesn't return to his criminal ways.
"I haven't even got a parking ticket since I've been in the program," said Zullo.
Shur said there is also a grievance process, during which "OEO serves as sort of an ombudsman" for witnesses. They have the ability to appeal decisions by a deputy, or by the U.S. Marshals Service, and he opined that sometimes it's a good idea to hire a "young, aggressive Legal Aid lawyer."
Since his funding was canceled, Zullo has had two new deputy marshals as contacts.
His first one, a woman, "told me to go sleep in a church if I had no place to go," he said.
Instead, in order to pay his rent, he decided to cash in an annuity worth $148,000 that he had wanted to keep as an insurance policy if he died. Because it was in his prior name, he had to use his new deputy to do that. He said it cost him $30,000 in fees — and more than six months — for him to get a one lump sum. After paying $20,000 in credit card and other debts, the $98,000 he netted is almost gone, he said.
To help make ends meet, Zullo said his wife of 44 years sold her engagement ring and other jewelry she had.
Zullo said that in November of 2015 his second replacement deputy marshal and his supervisor "came to the house and said it looked like we'd be funded again and he would let me know in a couple of weeks but he never called back."
Under urging from AUSA Geddes, who promised to vouch for his needs, Zullo filed an appeal with OEO. After waiting nearly a year, he lost that too.
A few days after Gang Land called Geddes and Gutman and began looking into Zullo's complaint, his deputy marshal called and left him a voice mail message.
"I just wanted to ask you," he said, "Are you guys planning on moving to a new apartment? They would like to know whether you guys are moving."
Mr. and Mrs. Zullo may have to move, but it won't be to a new apartment.
"We will be homeless soon," Zullo said. "We will be penniless soon. In less than a few months, we'll be living in a 2011 Kia Forte."
Stevie Junior Crea Hopes Fourth Try For Bail Is A Charm
Luchese gangster Steven D. (Stevie Junior) Crea has a new pair of lawyers who are taking dead aim at a series of embarrassing omissions and outright fibs that they say federal prosecutors have used to keep their client locked up as he awaits trial on murder charges.
In court papers filed this month seeking Crea's release on bail, veteran attorneys Joseph DiBenedetto and Seth Ginsberg blast prosecutors for failing to alert Judge Cathy Seibel back in January that their star witness had concocted an earlier phony story about the murder of former Purple Gang leader Michael Meldish.
Gang Land has identified the story-spinning witness as Frank Pasqua III, a drug dealer who reputedly ran with the younger Crea and his powerful dad, Luchese underboss Steven (Stevie Wonder) Crea, who is also charged with the Meldish rubout. Pasqua originally told the feds back in 2015 a bizarre tale of how his own dad — Frank Pasqua Jr. — shot and killed Meldish without warning on a Bronx street in 2013 as his son stood a few feet away.
Pasqua III has since admitted that he made up that version, but now says that Stevie Junior Crea told him that the Meldish hit was "sanctioned" by the Luchese family.
After other phony stories by prosecutors surfaced, Seibel warned the prosecutors at a bail hearing in January "to be very careful" about claims they make to keep the accused gangster behind bars. But lawyers DiBenedetto and Ginsberg say the feds are still playing fast and loose with the truth by not alerting the judge to their witness's earlier false account.
The lawyers noted that "the government has indicated that (Pasqua III) is its principal witness against Crea with respect to the Meldish murder" but failed to alert the court about his false account of the murder. The defense attorneys also claim that that Pasqua III is what they called a "stone-cold junkie" who "routinely beat his wife in front of their children" and who was "also physically abusive to his mom."
Stating that the information about Pasqua III was a "disturbing revelation" that undermines Crea's detention as a danger to the community, his attorneys have asked Seibel, who sits in White Plains Federal Court, to release their client, who has no prior arrests and has been held without bail for more than a year.
"It is difficult to fathom how the government can justify its failure to inform the Court of this crucial evidence" at Crea's bail hearing in January, "particularly in light of the Court's clear directive" to be "very careful, and if careful means that you can't make the showing, so be it," DiBenedetto and Ginsberg wrote.
Although Seibel agreed to keep Crea detained at the January hearing, she told prosecutors not to "take a lot of comfort in my ruling. This was not cool." She also warned them to be sure that"going forward everything is going to be double and triple checked before representations are made." Despite that caution, the defense lawyers wrote, the "government brazenly stood silent" about Pasqua III's erroneous claims that his father had killed Meldish.
The judge ordered prosecutors Scott Hartman, Jacqueline Kelly and Hagan Scotten to respond to Crea's motion on Monday, and scheduled a fourth bail hearing for next Friday.
Along with the Creas, aging former Luchese former street boss Matthew (Matty) Madonna, soldier Chris Londonio, and associate Terrence Caldwell are charged with racketeering and the November 15, 2013 murder of Meldish, who was shot to death as he sat in the front seat of his car in the Throggs Neck section of the Bronx.
Judge Puts Rooster In A Cage For 30 Months
Aging Genovese capo Eugene (Rooster) Onofrio gave some very kind fatherly advice against becoming a made man to a mob associate who was pushing to be sponsored for induction into the powerful crime family four years ago. If the 76-year-old wiseguy had taken his own advice decades ago, he likely wouldn't be looking at beginning a 30-month stretch behind bars in September.
"I love you to death like a son," Onofrio said loudly and clearly to John (J.R) Rubeo back on July 14, 2014. "You got a wife, a child, you got one coming," said Onofrio. "This life is not for a guy like you."
"I live it anyways, so what's the difference?" replied Rubeo.
At the time, Rubeo was about midway through the five year undercover sting that would nail 45 mob connected defendants from five families for a variety of crimes and he was recording every kindly word Onofrio spoke.
Moments earlier the wired-up snitch had bragged to Rooster that his official mob superior, capo Pasquale (Patsy) Parrello, had told Rubeo that he "was the smartest fucking guy that he ever met."
But Onofrio, who was obviously snookered by Rubeo, was trying to do a favor for J.R., 30 some odd years his junior and a contemporary of his own son. So he continued: "You met my son? I love him to death. I know he's good. My kid's name (comes) up, in a heartbeat, I would never put him in."
The government submitted the tape recording to show that Onofrio was not an old man who had retired from criminal activity in 1999 when he got out of prison the last time, but a powerful capo who oversaw two mob crews and deserved a sentence between 27 and 33 months, as called for in his plea agreement.
In the taped conversation, Onofrio referred to himself as a skipper who ran the crime family's Springfield, Massachusetts crew, and told Rubeo that he was going to sponsor a "gangster" who's "got balls and a heart" for induction so that he could be Rooster's eyes and ears in Springfield and save him from traveling from his home "in New Haven to Springfield all the time."
Manhattan Federal Judge Richard Sullivan rejected Onofrio's lawyer's pitch that there was "no need to incarcerate" his old and ailing client and sentenced the Rooster to 30 months in prison for loansharking and the sale of untaxed cigarettes, recommending "strongly" that he serve his time at the federal prison hospital in Ayer Massachusetts.
Even so, Onofrio did much better than he would have if he'd gone ahead and copped a plea deal last November with maximum sentencing guidelines of 57 months, two months before he and Philadelphia mob boss Joseph (Skinny Joey) Merlino were slated for trial. After the proceeding had begun, Rooster changed his mind and walked out of the courtroom.
Merlino, whose trial ended in a hung jury, faces the music on September 13, five days before Onofrio is slated to begin serving his sentence. No matter what, Skinny Joey is guaranteed to fare better than Rooster.
Skinny Joey pleaded guilty in April to minor gambling charges with sentencing guidelines between 10 and 16 months, and a maximum prison term capped at two years in prison.
Just smile and blow me - Mel Gibson
Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
Who do you think the Speingfield person was . Calabrese ?
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
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'three can keep a secret, if two are dead'
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
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'three can keep a secret, if two are dead'
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
thanks for posting, this Zullo is complicated, he turned a rat and today is in the shit, but if he was in the mafia could be arrested, it seems that as he is disabled the program does not have to worry about paying him anymore.
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
So a mob associate gets shot, on camera, makes news headlines, with video....
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
Don't give me your f***ing Manson lamps.
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
Sonny, who got shot on camera? please link me. Thanks, SPSonnyBlackstein wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 10:43 am So a mob associate gets shot, on camera, makes news headlines, with video....
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
'three can keep a secret, if two are dead'
Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
He's talking about Zottola, the Bonanno associate from the Bronx.SILENT PARTNERZ wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 11:11 amSonny, who got shot on camera? please link me. Thanks, SPSonnyBlackstein wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 10:43 am So a mob associate gets shot, on camera, makes news headlines, with video....
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
and colombo / gambino bust and nothing. dissapointinggohnjotti wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 11:13 amHe's talking about Zottola, the Bonanno associate from the Bronx.SILENT PARTNERZ wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 11:11 amSonny, who got shot on camera? please link me. Thanks, SPSonnyBlackstein wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 10:43 am So a mob associate gets shot, on camera, makes news headlines, with video....
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
Sorry. Wrong Frank
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
He probably doesn't know any more than what LE has already publicly stated. It's really early in the investigation so even his sources in LE are going to be pretty tight lipped on this.SonnyBlackstein wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 10:43 am So a mob associate gets shot, on camera, makes news headlines, with video....
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
The way you talk, you just confuse him.
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
Sure. I’m not saying the guy has to have a scoop and reveal the whole story. But it IS called Gangland... news, and well, the clue is in the title.Teddy Persico wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 4:00 pmHe probably doesn't know any more than what LE has already publicly stated. It's really early in the investigation so even his sources in LE are going to be pretty tight lipped on this.SonnyBlackstein wrote: ↑Thu Jul 26, 2018 10:43 am So a mob associate gets shot, on camera, makes news headlines, with video....
And Capeci writes fifteen fucking pages about an associate who flipped twenty years ago losing his fucking witsec payments.
Fuck me. Sometimes Capeci has his head so far up his ass it’s unbelievable.
He’s meant to be a journalist so he could pick up a phone and get some background info, he’s ‘meant’ to have contacts who can ‘guesstimate’ off the record, he could give a history of the guy or his families GL past etc etc etc.
But to not mention it at all? And instead replace it with a ‘no ones ever heard of’ associates sob story about how his government checks are now bouncing? Seriously?
See this is what happened. Jerry got a call from this guy, and unable to turn down a ‘scoop’ prioritized this crap over actual, gangland news.
And it was a stupid call based on misguided ego and he deserves hear about it.
It IS a pay per view site. He’s not doing charity work.
They teach this shit at journalism school. I heard.
Don't give me your f***ing Manson lamps.
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
I believe the class is called Journalism 101.
" Everything Woke turns to shit".
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
I believe it’s between recess, and lunch.
Last edited by SonnyBlackstein on Thu Jul 26, 2018 9:38 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Don't give me your f***ing Manson lamps.
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Re: Gangland - 7/26/18
Extra points to he who knows where that quotes from.
(Hint: do you like apples?)
(Hint: do you like apples?)
Don't give me your f***ing Manson lamps.