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| June 22, 2006 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Buster Ardito & The Hunt For FBI Bugs |
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The day – and its aftermath – turned out to be unforgettable however, with Ardito and his mob cronies, as well as dozens of FBI agents and NYPD Detectives, scurrying around in a wild treasure hunt game, according to secret court documents obtained by Gang Land. Ardito, then 83, was seated at the head of his favorite table – in the corner and across from the bar – at Agostino’s Italian Restaurant in New Rochelle, preparing to hold court for a group of his cronies. Then he felt something that didn’t belong there hanging below the table at the end of a strip of tape. Fearing the worst, the usually loquacious Ardito bit his tongue. At a nearby plant, FBI agent William Inzerillo, who was monitoring a court-authorized bug that had been taped under that table six months earlier, also feared the worst. “I overheard Ardito and the others manipulating the tape that was wrapped around the listening device which had been installed underneath the table. This |
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Ardito and his cohorts hightailed it out of Agostino’s and drove to another New Rochelle eatery less than two miles away, the Marina Restaurant & Bar, where Buster also had a regular table. There, another foreign object was discovered. As Inzerillo listened to the Marina bug, he “heard the individual who was conducting the search bump against the listening device, which was also under the table at the Marina,” wrote Inzerillo, adding that Ardito and his associates “left the device underneath the table.” Then they left the restaurant. Meanwhile, agents and detectives raced to Brunella Trattoria, also in New Rochelle, and Mario’s on Arthur Avenue in The Bronx to retrieve other bugs before the wiseguys could get to them. During the prior six months, the bugs had picked up Ardito and several associates, in particular mob lawyer Peter Peluso, discussing loansharking, labor racketeering, fraud, extortion and other crimes that they and family leaders |
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But the feds were still far from their goals when their devices were spotted, and they had to go back to the drawing board. In an effort to out-fox the nosey feds, Ardito changed his habits. He used “walk-talks,” a total of 16 eateries, a doctor’s office, Fiorino’s jewelry store, an auto parts store, cars, and a boat, all the while meeting with Peluso and other FBI targets, including Bellomo’s brother-in-law Gerald Fiorino. The changes made it impractical, if not impossible, to bug his meeting places. The surveillance conscious Ardito also refrained from discussing any criminal activity on his cell phone. But while he didn’t use his mobile phone to discuss criminal matters, he never left home without it. In fact, on July 3, 2003, only six days before Buster had begun a mad scramble for bugs, the FBI had heard him loading numbers into his cell phone so he could leave his pocket phone book home, Inzerillo wrote in a September 3, 2003 affidavit. As a result, the feds won court approval to place a bug in his phone, and put their derailed electronic surveillance probe back on track. And so, for the next 15 months, everywhere Buster went, he wore his own wire. The FBI’s cell phone bug picked up his conversations as he talked about murder and mayhem. The evidence ultimately enabled the feds to tag Bellomo, 49, |
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Despite a recommendation by pre-trial services that he be released on bail to await trial, Ardito, now 86 and suffering from heart and lung disease, was detained. An informal Gang Land survey shows that Ardito is the oldest wiseguy currently behind bars, although 89-year-old perennial parole violator John (Sonny) Franzese could reclaim that spot at a moment’s notice.
Prosecutors Miriam
Rocah and Jonathan Kolodner successfully argued that Ardito should be
detained because of his tape recorded boasts of faithful mob
“The sad case,” said attorney Richard Rehbock, “is that he’s not involved in anything anymore. He used to have a piece of the Peppermint Lounge; he had a construction business. He’s just voicing his opinion about his friends and his enemies, chatting about this and that, gossiping with Pete Peluso. He shouldn’t have to go to jail for that.” |
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According to numerous convoluted conversations, the Genoveses claimed a table that had belonged to imprisoned Luchese capo Anthony (Bowat) Baratta, (right) and Ardito steadfastly pushed Peluso to coerce and cajole Muscarella, Cirillo and Bellomo to rule that Buster, not a slew of family pretenders, deserved use of the table every other week. After meeting with the imprisoned Bellomo, who’s been incarcerated since 1996, Peluso reported back that Barney, who had just been hit with racketeering charges while serving a sentence for extortion, was incensed at being drawn into such a trivial matter. “I don’t know what the hell’s going on out there. But I’ll tell you one thing, they’re all going to get pinched (if) they want to make issues and sitdowns over issues like this,” Bellomo said, according to an affidavit by Inzerillo.
Meanwhile, Peluso, the family’s trusted mob “counselor” who delivered messages for family elders going back to Anthony (Fat Tony) Salerno, secretly pleaded guilty, and switched sides. He is waiting to back up the government’s latest salvo from the witness stand. |
![]() Gang Land appears each week in The New York Sun. |
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| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2006- All Rights Reserved |