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| February 3, 2005 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Anatomy Of A Turncoat Mafia Boss |
The imprisoned mob boss has been cooperating with the feds since September, sources say, and one of his first information proffers was an empty lot on Ruby street called “The Hole.” As reporters, TV cameras and fascinated neighbors looked on for three weeks, the FBI used backhoes and shovels to recover the remains of two capos executed in a 1981 bloodletting by Massino and his cohorts. Massino had apparently fallen for a bit of mob folklore, however, when he told the feds that the spot was also the final resting place of three John Gotti murder victims, including a Howard Beach, Queens resident who was killed a year earlier on orders from the Dapper Don. The remains of John Favara – a backyard neighbor of Gotti's who had killed the mobster's 12-year-old son in a tragic accident – were not found during the Big Dig, but the massive undertaking uncovered evidence that capos Dominick (Big Trin) Trinchera and Philip (Philly Lucky) Giaccone had been buried there. Massino, 62, is the first New York mob boss to publicly violate omerta, the Mafia vow of silence. His extraordinary decision to defect, and to record conversations with his hand-picked acting boss, were disclosed last Thursday. He first reached out to the feds seeking some kind of a deal in September, sources say. The parameters of his cooperation are not known and it is unclear how |
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extensive and helpful his information will prove to be. But news that the so-called Last Don, a dyed-in-the-wool gangster with supposed old-world mob ethics, is an informer has rocked the underworld, as well as the attorneys and investigators who work for and against gangsters on a regular basis. “It’s astounding. There are a lot of people who are very worried,” a well-connected mob lawyer told Gang Land. “Two Gambino oldtimers decided they couldn’t take the stress and took a quick trip to Florida,” said one law enforcement source.
Sources say Massino reached out to the feds two months after he was convicted of seven mob hits. At the time, he was facing mandatory life in prison and the likelihood that prosecutors would seek the death penalty for him at his pending trial for the 1999 murder of Bonanno capo Gerlando (George From Canada) Sciascia. (left) Massino’s most obvious goal was avoiding possible execution. He also sought to insure that his wife and other family members did not lose their homes and other |
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In addition to pointing the FBI to a mob graveyard near his and Gotti’s old stomping grounds, sources say Massino also furnished some up-to-date information about activities by his and other families as a show of good faith to wary agents and prosecutors under Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Roslynn Mauskopf. (right) By Nov. 12, when prosecutors Greg Andres and Nicolas Bourtin announced in court that then-Attorney General John Ashcroft had authorized them to seek the death penalty for Sciascia’s murder, sources say that Massino had been providing the feds information for at least six weeks. A week later, on Nov. 19, the plot thickened. Massino's hand-picked acting boss, Vincent (Vinny Gorgeous) Basciano was arrested on murder, arson and a slew of other charges and added to the Sciascia case. Even though Vinny Gorgeous had no involvement in the Sciascia murder, and Massino was not charged in the same racketeering acts as Basciano, they were codefendants in the same case and incarcerated at the same federal lockup, the Metropolitan Detention Center in Brooklyn.
On Nov. 23, Vinny
Gorgeous proposed the murder of Andres, the lead
prosecutor in their
case, to Massino while they were at the Brooklyn Federal On Dec. 3, a day that Massino and Basciano (left) attended a codefendants meeting at the MDC, Vinny Gorgeous told Massino that he had arranged the murder of mob associate Randolph Pizzolo two days earlier, the indictment said. On two occasions the following month, on Jan. 3 and Jan. 7, Basciano spoke to Massino about the “threat on |
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(Andres), the murder of Pizzolo and the ongoing and future operations of the Bonanno family,” the indictment said. While discussing Pizzolo’s killing on Jan. 3, Massino asked: “Why didn’t you just chase him?” “Because he is a fucking dangerous kid that don’t fucking listen,” Basciano replied, adding later, “I thought this kid would have been a good wake-up call for everybody.” Sources say that Massino was so eager to please the feds that he agreed to record conversations with Basciano even before his secretly appointed “shadow counsel” had worked out a cooperation agreement with the feds. In fact, Massino still doesn’t have a signed deal with federal prosecutors.
An unshaved and disheveled Massino appeared at a 9 AM proceeding before Judge Nicholas Garaufis (right) yesterday. During the brief session, the judge officially appointed lawyer Edward McDonald to represent Massino for all purposes, including negotiations with the government regarding his still-pending death penalty case, and his sentencing for his racketeering conviction, now scheduled for April 15. Massino and McDonald have a history, of sorts. During the 1980s, McDonald |
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headed the federal Organized Crime Strike Force, the elite Brooklyn unit that in 1986 convicted Massino of racketeering charges, the career gangster’s only prior federal rap.
The feds made several apparent moves to conceal Massino’s informer status from his former cronies and also blunt future claims that the turncoat boss was a “spy in the camp” of his codefendants. On Nov. 29, for example, they placed Massino in the MDC’s Segregated Housing Unit, causing Massino to miss a December 10th codefendants meeting at the MDC. The move also triggered several motions and court appearances by his attorney at the time, Flora Edwards, who sought to return him to general population. Edwards, who was unaware that Massino was talking to the feds, withdrew as his lawyer when Massino’s informer status became known. In addition, an earlier decision by Massino not to retain his attorney in the July trial, David Breitbart, to defend him for the Sciascia murder, seems to have been part of a plan to eliminate the possibility that the veteran trial lawyer would deduce Massino’s dual role. Lastly, once Basciano’s alleged intention to whack Andres became known, the prosecutor was removed from that investigation and replaced by another deputy chief in the organized crime unit, assistant U.S. attorney Thomas Seigel. |
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| Contact Gang Land | ||
| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2004- All Rights Reserved |