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Mafia killer must pay child support for baby born while on life sentence
By Peter Edwards Staff Reporter
Mon., April 24, 2023
A convicted underworld killer who fathered a child while behind bars has been ordered to pay $3,748 in monthly child support, spousal support and nanny costs as he serves out his life prison term.
Martino Caputo, 49, of Toronto has been in prison since 2017, when he was convicted of helping a group called The Wolfpack Alliance shoot drug importer Johnny Raposo dead on the patio of College Street restaurant during a massive cocaine deal gone wrong.
Court records show that Caputo married and artificially impregnated Robyn Amy Louise Hohmeier of Toronto while serving his first-degree murder sentence in Collins Bay Institution in Kingston.
She became pregnant with his child in 2021, with medical assistance, court records state. After Caputo ended their relationship, he was ordered last fall to pay $910 monthly in child support, $2,042 in spousal support and $796 monthly towards a live-in nanny.
There was no end date given for the support payments. He is eligible to apply for parole after serving 25 years in prison.
In happier times, court heard that he gave her lavish gifts from prison, including multiple pieces of Cartier jewelry, two SUVs, a custom wedding band appraised at $88,000, a Versace scarf and a Rolex watch worth $20,000.
In their court battle, she argued in the Ontario Superior Court of Justice that he made an annual income of $243,531 through real estate investments and sports gambling, even while he was behind bars. She sought $1,972 a month in child support and $5,091 a month in spousal support.
She claimed nearly $16,000 in monthly expenses, including $1,000 for clothing; $200 for flowers; more than $600 in hair care and beauty; $200 for pet care; $833 for education; $1,000 for gifts; $400 for children’s clothing; $400 for laundry and dry cleaning; $1,640 for a live-in nanny; more than $1,500 for a night nanny; $600 for a dog walker and $2,300 for debt payments.
Caputo countered through his lawyer that he made roughly $50,000 yearly while an inmate through what he called legal sports betting and a $6.90 a day job as secretary of the Inmate Committee and a prison position called “grocery rep.”
Court records say Caputo and Hohmeier started efforts to have a child two years after he began serving his life sentence.
“On Sept. 3, 2019, she attended at Collins Bay and the respondent provided his sperm through a process facilitated by the Chief of Health Services at Collins Bay,” a decision by Justice Andrew Pinto reads. “The applicant then drove to Toronto to deliver the sperm to a fertility clinic.”
“The applicant claims that the parties dated from 2009-2012 and that she grew closer to the respondent despite his incarceration,” Pinto writes. “She claims that between 2016 and early 2022, when the parties separated, she travelled regularly to Kingston to visit the respondent, spoke to him on the phone three times a day for extended periods, and had weekly video visits with him.”
The couple were married on Aug. 28, 2018, during the second year of his prison term.
She gave birth to a child in December 2021.
In February 2022, he advised her through counsel that he wanted to separate, the court paper states.
Court records state that she lost her $110,000 job as a marketing company account director in December 2018 and that Caputo then reassured her that she would not have to worry about money.
A court document adds that tensions peaked in the long-distance marriage when she lost the job and “commenced extensive renovations of the apartment where she intended to reside.”
It adds that Caputo did not approve of the renovations.
A court document said she anticipates being able to secure work as an interior designer in the winter of 2025 when she completes university courses.
The judge noted that Caputo argued he is not a bookie while in prison.
“There is no ‘vig’ involved in his activities,” the judge quotes his lawyer as saying, referring to the “vigorish” — the fee a bookmaker or sportsbook charges a bettor for placing a wager. “He participates in legal betting with other inmates at Collins Bay. The inmates use the odds from the TV station and have friends or family on the outside transfer money into and out of their bank accounts.”
At the time of Raposo’s murder by a hired hitman, Caputo was aligned with the Wolfpack Alliance, an underworld association that included a Hells Angels biker and Rabih (Robby) Alkhalil, a twice-convicted killer who escaped from custody last summer and remains on the run.
Caputo’s murder trial heard that he had once been one of Raposo’s friends and attended the baptism of his child.