|
| October 27, 2005 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Mob Lawyer Comes Out Swinging |
Mob lawyer Joseph Corozzo isn’t the kind of guy who takes things lying down. The pugnacious attorney, whose father and uncle are high ranked mobsters, has lashed out at the feds, accusing them of using gossip, lies and other smear tactics in an effort to oust him from the murder trial of a Gambino family capo who has been a lifelong friend.
“It is unfair and unduly cruel to judge counsel’s ability to be a good and ethical advocate for his client based solely upon his family,” said Corozzo, whose client, Dominick (Skinny Dom) Pizzonia, (right) is charged with the Christmas Eve revenge murders in 1992 of a husband and wife team who had robbed numerous mob social clubs earlier that year. Corozzo, whose father Joseph is the Gambino consigliere and whose uncle, Nicholas (Little Nick) Corozzo, is a feared capo and heir apparent to the family throne, has represented them and countless other wiseguys since he became a lawyer in 1991. In court papers, Brooklyn federal prosecutors charged earlier this month that Corozzo’s “loyalties to his father and uncle” and his representation of 30 other |
|
named wiseguys “implicated” him as a co-conspirator in the same “racketeering conspiracy” as his client and warranted his disqualification.
“There is no case law supporting the government’s assertions that the family one was born into is a sufficient ground with which to disqualify an attorney’s representation of a defendant,” Corozzo wrote in his own brief, adding that in 15 years as a lawyer he has never before been bounced from a case because of his lineage. For prosecutors to implicate him in the same conduct as his clients are accused of, without filing any charges against him, he wrote, “is patently unfair, illogical and an affront to the criminal defense bar as a whole.” Corozzo made no apologies for his clients, asserting that government persecution has made it hard to attract other clients. “For the better part of 15 years,” Corozzo stated, prosecutors have been charging him with conflict of |
|
interest with reputed mobsters. “This kind of notoriety hampers (my) ability to maintain a white-collar crime client base.” The charge that he had been proposed for induction into the Gambino family, even under the government’s theory, “never came to fruition,” wrote Corozzo. Moreover, it was “idle chatter” between two wiseguys – one a well-known gossip, Gregory DePalma – that was triggered by an FBI report, and “does not implicate counsel in any way,” wrote Corozzo. Corozzo concedes that he is under investigation in two criminal matters – he readily volunteers that he has testified before grand juries four times since 1996 – but notes that Pizzonia, like many clients in “numerous” other cases, would waive any “potential conflict.”
The attorney categorically denies the sole assertion that would result in a sure conflict of interest ouster – a contention by prosecution witness Michael (Mikey |
|
There is no record of DiLeonardo (left) ever retaining Corozzo in any court case. As for the turncoat’s claim that he gave Corozzo a $1000 check in April 2001 that was cashed at the Staten Island Savings Bank, Corozzo wrote that “no record of that check exists,” a fact that authorities conceded to Gang Land. Earlier this year, Corozzo was disqualified from the trial of John A. (Junior) Gotti because he had represented a mobster who was a member of Little Nick Corozzo’s crew, and had previously defended two turncoats scheduled to testify as government witnesses, including Mikey Scars. Citing testimony by DiLeonardo and another witness, Corozzo noted that much of the rationale Manhattan Judge Shira Scheindlin used to disqualify him was based on prosecutors’ assertions that were not borne out at trial, and should be revisited. Brooklyn Federal Judge Jack Weinstein has scheduled a hearing on the issue for next month. Assistant U.S. attorneys Mitra Hormozi and Winston Chan, who were scheduled to file a response yesterday, requested ten additional days to reply to Corozzo’s papers. Other than say that they would respond in court, the prosecutors declined to comment. |
| Every $50,000 Helps |
|
This fact of life became abundantly clear as a gaggle of Gambino gangsters and mob associates gathered in Brooklyn Federal Court this week to go over their obligations to forfeit millions of dollars as part of plea deals to resolve the largest consumer fraud in U.S. history – a cool $750 million. When attorney Gary Becker mentioned that his client Zef Mustafa (right) had a total bill of $1.75 million, Mustafa, who has forked over $750,000 thus far, stood up, scowled, and motioned for his attorney to come over to him. After a brief confab, Becker resumed speaking to Judge Carol Amon when Mustafa beckoned his attorney again. “My client has informed me that his forfeiture is $1.7 million,” Becker said sheepishly when he continued his colloquy with the Judge. During the proceeding, assistant U.S. attorney Eric Komitee charged Mustafa’s reputed mob supervisor, Salvatore (Tore) Locascio, with dragging his feet in selling his Scarsdale home to help satisfy his $4.7 million forfeiture, of which he still owes $3.6 million. “Locascio needs to drop the price immediately,” said Komitee. “It should not |
|
“Nobody benefits if these properties are sold at distressed prices,” countered Locascio’s attorney, Maurice Sercarz, noting that his client has dropped his price by $100,000. As Komitee and Sercarz sparred over the difficulties in negotiating a fair deal for his Westchester home before Locascio (left) is sentenced in early December, Tore was in one of two homes he owns in Naples, Florida, fading in and out on a cell phone, as Hurricane Wilma ravaged through the Sunshine State.
Reached yesterday,
Sercarz told Gang Land his client was still assessing the damage. “I thought
it was a little over the top for the government to berate Tore for dragging
his feet on the very day he was being blown around by the hurricane,” said
Sercarz. Meanwhile, other defendants were scrambling to meet their financial obligations before their respective sentencing day deadlines, from December 1 through December 15 According to court records, mobster Richard Martino, (right) the architect of the telephone and internet porn fraud schemes at the heart of the case, owes $6.2 million of a $9.1 million bill; his brother Daniel has $500,000 remaining of his $1 million payment; mobster Andrew (Andrew Campo) Campos owes $190,000 of a $300,000 forfeiture. |
| Contact
Gang Land |
||
| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2005- All Rights Reserved |