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| November 11, 2004 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
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Junior: Shut Your Mouth Curtis Curtis: You Gotta Be Kidding! |
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Citing the same statutes the feds used against Bruce Cutler – the outspoken lawyer who represented Gotti’s late father, the Dapper Don – Junior asked a federal judge to issue a gag order against Sliwa, the motor-mouth co-host of WABC radio’s show, “Curtis & Kuby In the Morning.” Sliwa has been on a non-stop, on-air tear against the Gotti clan ever since federal prosecutors filed attempted murder charges against Junior this summer. But if bullets couldn’t shut Sliwa’s mouth, is there even a remote possibility that a federal gag order would do the trick? “Not a
chance,” Sliwa told Gang Land. “I would openly defy it. These people tried
to kill me twice. I’ve been saying that for 12 years. Now the government
says Curtis was
right, and I can’t talk about it? No way. This is America. Land of In court papers, Gotti asserts that he is not seeking to suppress Sliwa’s right to free speech, but to force Sliwa to adhere to laws that prohibit him, a “prominent” prosecution witness, from using his “wildly popular radio show” to poison potential jurors in a daily “smear campaign” against him. “Among other mischief,” stated attorney Jeffrey Lichtman this week, “he has attacked Gotti’s character, credibility and reputation; relentlessly distorted and |
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misrepresented the case’s merits and the expected trial evidence, and shrilly proclaimed Gotti’s guilt – boasting ‘inside’ access to inadmissible information.” If Sliwa, a “vituperative, quasi-law enforcement witness,” is not stopped, wrote Lichtman, “millions of New Yorkers – potential jurors all – will be exposed to his venom by the time trial begins in August 2005,” rendering a fair trial virtually impossible. “In my business,” countered Sliwa, “this is the highest compliment I can be paid. It’s just not true that every potential juror has heard me say that Gotti should rot in jail and go straight to hell without an asbestos suit. I accept all these plaudits but it’s not true. Sliwa said Lichtman is on a search and destroy mission on behalf of the mobsters who tried to kill him. “He’s
subpoenaed us for every mention of Gotti or Gambino, not only what we
“The poor engineer got a double hernia producing pounds and pounds of tapes,” he said. “I hope Lichtman had to listen to the tapes and didn’t outsource this to a guy in New Delhi to transcribe.” Gotti’s recent efforts to stifle him were preferable to those allegedly used by soldier Michael (Mikey Y) Yannotti, (left) who fired several bullets into Sliwa’s legs and groin |
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“At least this time they decided to take a different route to silence me, one that benefits my health and well being,” he said. “They are progressing. They have gotten their legal beagle to move ahead with a legal version of omerta, as opposed to trying to kill me.” Gotti, 40, Yannotti, 41, and mobster Joseph (Little Joe) D’Angelo, 36 (right) – the alleged wheelman in the assault – are charged with kidnapping and attempted murder of Sliwa, and a variety of other unrelated racketeering charges that were lodged in July. Sliwa took a shot at his co-host, reputed civil liberties lawyer Ronald Kuby, former New York Civil Liberties Union executive director Norman Siegel, as well as the NYCLU’s umbrella organization, the American Civil Liberties Union, for their lack of support.
In the end, said Sliwa, “jail is not a foreign country” and he would reluctantly do his time if Manhattan Federal Judge Shira Scheindlin incarcerates him for refusing to obey any gag order, hopefully, in a cell not too close to the still detained without bail Junior Gotti. |
| Junior Remembers A Great Guy |
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On March 11, according to a transcript of a jailhouse conversation recorded by an FBI bug, Junior told attorney Richard Rehbock (right) to send $500 to Richard Gomes, a member of the crew that allegedly killed Favara and disposed of his body at the elder Gotti’s behest. “He was very dear to my father,” Junior said. “He was broke. People who came through here told me he was a great guy. Real man.” |
| Plea Deal Ruling Irks Feds & Wiseguy |
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Back on March 18, Garaufis accepted the original plea – which took months to work out – at the end of an hour-long court session. On Friday, however, the judge suddenly reversed himself, telling Lino to take a 36 year sentence or go to trial. Under the earlier deal, with time already served and normal good time off, Lino, 38, would be released at age 60. The judge’s ultimatum would keep him in until he hits 68. Judges have discretion to reject plea bargains, but rarely do so, unless a pre-sentencing investigation uncovers facts that were unknown when the plea was taken. That did not occur here.
By succumbing to the emotional pleas of a Lino victim’s relatives – Lino cleaned up the murder scene after the slaying – Garaufis established a bad precedent for himself when time comes for him to sentence double-digit mob murderers who cooperated. Turncoat underboss Salvatore (Good Looking Sal) Vitale, for example, admits involvement in 11 murders; Massino’s lawyers argued the number approached 30. Whatever the number, aren’t the relatives of those victims entitled to as much vengeance as Lino’s? And if Garaufis does not rescind his decision, it will have a chilling effect on plea negotiations with mobsters in the future, especially those whose cases are before him. Lino’s lawyer, Barry Levin, who told reporters last week that his client was “shocked,” told Gang Land he will ask Garaufis to “reconsider” his ruling at a status conference tomorrow. Prosecutors declined to comment. |
| Contact Gang Land | ||
| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2004- All Rights Reserved |