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| December 15, 2005 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Jackie Nose Runs The Gambinos |
For the last few months, law enforcement sources say, D’Amico, (right) a bookmaker and lowly soldier before Gotti’s rise to the top, has been quietly, but firmly, functioning as the family’s “street boss.” “He’s meeting people and taking care of business,” said one source. A staunch supporter of the Dapper Don during his heyday, Jackie Nose was a close ally of Gotti’s replacement boss – brother Peter Gotti – and an advisor to John A. (Junior) Gotti during his tenure as acting boss, according to court records. “He was a member of the Gambino family Administration for years, from 1993 up until his (1999) arrest,” said another source. D’Amico pled to a federal rap in |
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Jackie Nose was Gotti’s constant companion during his glory days. He was regularly spotted accompanying Gotti on his notorious “walk-talks” around his Little Italy headquarters, events that were memorialized on numerous FBI videotapes that were played at the 1992 trial that ended Gotti’s reign. “A John only comes along once in a life,” D’Amico told reporters during that trial, praising Gotti as an “original.” Gotti “had two things going for him,” the outspoken D’Amico said at the time. “He was loved and feared. He’s the only person I’ve seen with both. You call it charisma. He has that. But love and fear was what counted. People don’t cross a man they love and fear.”
Another important attribute, sources say, is that the 69-year-old gangster is no longer constrained by strict federal supervision, having completed a three year stretch last year following his September 2001 release from prison. Assisting D’Amico in his new role, sources say, is Domenico (Italian Dom) Cefalu, 59, (right) a member of |
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The new leaders owe their rise to an FBI onslaught that has former acting boss Arnold (Zeke) Squitieri waiting trial for racketeering in Manhattan and former underboss Anthony (The Genius) Megale facing sentencing for a racketeering rap in Connecticut. Consigliere Joseph (JoJo) Corozzo (left) rounds out the Administration, sources said. Italian Dom was “made” in November 1990, the last induction ceremony conducted by Gotti. He was arrested the following month on racketeering and murder charges. He was convicted and died in a federal prison hospital in 2002. Convicted of heroin trafficking in 1982, Cefalu proved his mob mettle during the years after Gotti’s conviction by serving 51 months in prison for two contempt of court convictions that stymied the feds’ efforts to convict a family capo of murder charges. As he was about to be released from prison after doing18 months for civil contempt for refusing to testify before a grand jury, the feds hit him with criminal contempt for not testifying at the trial of Pasquale (Patsy) Conte, which cost Cefalu 33 additional months behind bars. As for the shooting of capo Carmine Sciandra at one of his three Top Tomato |
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Like the law enforcers, wiseguys in the know say the fault begins and ends with ex-cop Patrick Balsamo, the alleged out-of-control, bat-wielding gunman who was hell bent on revenge and shot Sciandra. (right) While Balsamo, who was released on $25,000 bail, faces up to 25 years in prison if convicted of first degree assault, his punishment would likely be decidedly more severe if the Gambinos have their way with him. They have absolved Bonanno soldier Ronald (Ronnie Mozzarella) Carlucci, 62, and associate Michael Virga, 52, of any fault, asserting that Carlucci drove to Top Tomato intent on stopping Balsamo, 49, but got there too late, and fled after the shooting. "Ronnie Mozzarella is probably the least violent mobster in the five families,” said one law enforcement official about the reputed mobster, whose nickname derives from his quite substantial mozzarella business. Carlucci’s cheese business is so successful, and he earns so much money – some of which he dutifully funnels up to his mob superiors – that in 1998 he was |
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Even though his business, identified by law enforcement officials as Lioni Latticini, of Union N.J., is legitimately operated, Carlucci is obliged to pay tribute from those earnings to his crime family. As acting Bonanno boss Vincent (Vinny Gorgeous) Basciano told turncoat boss Joseph Massino (left) early this year in a tape recorded discussion obtained by Gang Land: “How did Ronnie Mozzarella get there? What, he was born and became a mozzarella guy? He got there because of us.” Lioni, which began as a small mozzarella store in Bensonhurst, Broooklyn, is now the largest importer of mozzarella Di Bufala from Naples. The firm produces and distributes mozzarella and other cheese products in 35 cities from New York to California each year, according to its website. Carlucci, who lives near the company’s wholesale outlet in Bensonhurst, Virga, who is listed as Lioni’s Director of Sales on the company’s website, and their lawyer, Raphael Scotto, could not be reached for comment yesterday. |
In yesterday's New York Times, award-winning columnist Dan Barry had an
interesting take on the
Top
Tomato shooting and the very difficult waiting game that former NYPD
cop Patrick Balsamo is playing during the Christmas season. |
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One Brooklyn Trial For Bronx Duo |
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Brooklyn Federal Judge Nicholas Garaufis rejected Patty From The Bronx’s request to allow his lawyer to play taped discussions between Massino and Basciano as part of his defense, and refused to sever his case from Basciano’s. DeFilippo claimed the tapes were essential for his defense, but the judge disagreed, deciding that whatever information from the tapes might be relevant could be introduced into evidence in other ways. In a sop for DeFilippo, Garaufis ruled that some redacted portions of Massino’s words might be admissible on cross-examination, but the judge defined the circumstances so narrowly that it is highly unlikely that jurors will hear any of Massino’s words.
The tapes include
portions in which Basciano is heard discussing a plot to kill assistant U.S.
attorney Greg Andres, who has been the lead prosecutor in the case from the
outset but who will not prosecute a follow-up trial in which Vinny
Being the alleged target of a murder plot by his defendant would likely stimulate Andres to try a little harder against Vinny Gorgeous, but his continued role in the current case has not been challenged by Basciano’s defense lawyer, Barry Levin. “I have no intention, or desire, to recuse Mr. Andres,” said Levin. “I look forward to trying the case against him, so long as the charges that are pending in Basciano II will not be part of this trial.” |
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Gang Land |
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| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2005- All Rights Reserved |