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| January 27, 2000 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Junk Yard Dog |
One thing about John
Gotti, he knows about doing stupid things and getting caught. He basically predicted
the fate that befell his mobster son-in-law Carmine Agnello (right) this week."He's gonna get indicted any day, this moron. He's built himself a gallows. He's bought the noose," Gotti said two years ago during a jailhouse visit with his daughter (and Carmine's wife) Victoria and his brother Pete. At the time, the Dapper Don was lamenting the racketeering indictment of his son Junior, which he also characterized as stemming from stupidity. Several times he warned Victoria, a best-selling author, that her hot-tempered hubby, who's had several dustups with cops and traffic enforcement agents, would be the next Gotti family member to get in serious trouble.
Gotti's timing was just a little off, but he
accurately predicted that when Carmine was nailed authorities would try to seize assets
from his $30-million-a-year string of scrap metal businesses. Probably no one, however,
could have predicted he would be busted for allegedly trying to strong-arm undercover cops
running a sting operation designed to nab car
This week, Agnello (right) was hit with state racketeering, extortion, and numerous other charges related to threatening and attempting to terrorize the cops. If convicted, he faces up to 25 years. Meanwhile prosecutors froze millions of dollars of his assets. Last April, cops opened up Stadium Scrap, a scrap metal business in the Shea Stadium area of Queens that is home to 150 salvage yards, auto body shops, auto glass shops and scrap metal processors. The cops were crushing |
cars and reselling
them to a nearby scrap metal processor for $2.65 a pound. "The officers set up an
office in a trailer on the premises in which they installed various audio and video
recording devices, including two video cameras inside the trailer and one outside the
trailer overlooking the salvage yard," said Queens District Attorney Richard Brown.
(right)Within a month after they opened up shop, on May 20, Carmine strolled brazenly right onto the set. "We were in direct competition with them and
we were giving better prices than they were, and they were losing accounts," said
Detective James
The cops were probably silently snickering; they certainly hadn't expected such a big fish to get caught in their net so quickly. Naturally, they refused to knuckle under, and sat back and let the cameras do their thing. Agnello and three confederates were taped firebombing Stadium Scrap's trailer office and a flatbed three times in the next month, prosecutors said. When Gerard Brave and Peri Kadanoff, two assistant Queens district attorneys determined they had enough evidence to nail Agnello and his buddies, the cops pretended they had gotten the message and agreed to do business with Agnello, selling their scrap metal to his New York Shredding Corporation for $2.10 a pound. Then, they followed their initial game plan, nailing 48 others for various auto-related crimes, including insurance fraud and possession of stolen cars, parts, and vehicle identification numbers. Agnello's media-savvy lawyer, Marvyn Kornberg, says his client, who was held on $10 million bail, was targeted by authorities because he was married to Gotti's daughter, but would be exonerated of all charges.
"He's an imbecile. And you gotta see the charges," said Gotti, pretending to read from Agnello's rap sheet. "Malicious mopery. Possession of brains with intent to use. Malicious mopery. Malicious mopery. Stolen bumper. Hubcab." At another point, he asked Victoria: "So what's the story with Carmine?" "What do you mean, what's the story with him?" she asked. "Is he feeling good? Is he not feeling good? Is his medication increased? Decreased? Is it up? Down? Does he get in the backseat of the car and think someone has stolen the steering wheel?" |
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| Family Scandals |
Mobsters in the New York area have been
taking a beating for several years. Now, it's their relatives' turn.Gambino soldier Vincent Corrao, who served as acting capo while his dad, Joseph (Joe Butch) Corrao, (right) served time for racketeering, was nabbed for possessing a small quantity of Ecstasy (ketamine) in the parking lot of a Staten Island nightclub last Saturday morning. Two days earlier, Jennifer Graziano, a daughter of Bonanno capo Anthony (T.G.) Graziano, was hit with federal drug charges for being a member of a marijuana distribution ring allegedly run by her sister Rene's husband. The younger Corrao, 34, of Monsey, was spotted handing something to Gambino associate Shelton Willis by narcotics cops and arrested on misdemeanor drug charges when cops found a small quantity of drugs on Willis, said Chief Assistant district attorney David Lehr.
Graziano, 28, and her brother-in-law, Hector Pagan, 34, husband of Rene Graziano, were overheard discussing pickups, work schedules, and paydays of runners who delivered pot to customers around the city, according to an arrest complaint by DEA agent Michael Cline. Graziano isn't the first female member of the family to run afoul of the law. Her sister Lana was charged with mail fraud in 1989. Those charges, and similar ones prepared against their mother and Lana's mother-in-law, were dropped when the men of the family pleaded guilty to tax charges in a plea bargain that spared the women. Jennifer Graziano, a graduate student at New York University, is one of two college students among eight defendants in the case. A third was studying to be a court reporter. All were released on bail. |
| Big Frank Stands Tall |
|
Guerra, 35, a close associate of Colombo boss Alphonse Persico, (below left) was indicted by a federal grand jury in Brooklyn for dealing drugs in 1993 and 1994 and by a jury in Manhattan for extortion charges involving threats against a Manhattan brokerage in 1997.
"Frank Guerra pleads guilty to being a friend of Alphonse Persico but innocent to both charges and is looking forward to clearing his name and getting on with his life," said Mari. Last year, Gang Land reported that Guerra was allegedly involved in a drug deal for which Luchese associate Frank Smith was wrongly convicted and serving his 11th year of a 15 years-to-life sentence. Smith was tried with Persico's cousin, Theodore Persico Jr., who was also found guilty and sentenced to 20-to-life. |
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| Copyright,
Jerry Capeci, 2000 All Rights Reserved |