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ANTHONY "BIG TONY" MOSCATIELLO CONVICTED FOR MIAMI SUBS FOUNDER MURDER

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BY CHRIS JOSEPH

Anthony "Big Tony" Moscatiello, who, along with Anthony "Little Tony" Ferrari, had been accused of having Miami Subs founder Konstantinos "Gus" Boulis rubbed out in a Mob-style hit, was convicted of first-degree murder and murder conspiracy Wednesday in the 2001 killing of Boulis.
Ferrari was found guilty for his part in the murder in 2013.
But prosecutors said that it was Moscatiello, 77, who put together the plot to have Boulis killed on the night of February 6, 2001.
On the night of his death, Boulis, who was also the owner of SunCruz Casinos, pulled out of his Fort Lauderdale office in his car when two cars approached him. His killer appeared in next car facing the opposite direction and shot Boulis before screeching off.
According to investigators, Boulis drove a mile toward Federal Highway and SE 18th Street, where he crashed into a tree on the side of the road and died from his gunshot wounds.
The killing was motivated by a deal between Boulis and a businessman named Adam Kidan that went sour.
Kidan brokered a deal to purchase SunCruz Casinos from Boulis for $147.5 million in 2000. However, the deal eventually proved to be fraudulent. Boulis accused Kidan of falsifying the wire transfer, and things came to a head when the two got into a fistfight in December 2000.
Fearful of Boulis, prosecutors said that Kidan hired "Big Tony" Moscatiello for protection; Moscatiello brought Ferrari along.
During the Ferrari trial, witnesses testified that Little Tony was a captain in the infamous Gambino organized crime family.
Moscatiello saw the earning potential of working for Kidan. And he thus considered Boulis a threat to his money, prosecutors said.
This was the two Tonys' motivation to have Boulis rubbed out.
Ferrari took the stand on his own behalf during his own trial, against his attorney's wishes, and testified that he had nothing to do with the hit on Boulis. He was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison
As for Big Tony, his original trial ended up in mistrial last year after his attorney came down with an illness. For the retrial, Moscatiello's attorney tried to paint Kidan as the main culprit behind the killing, saying he had more motivation than anyone to see Boulis dead.
Moscatiello, who was also a member of the Gambino crime family, now faces a possible death sentence









Quotes from “No time to say goodbye: memoirs of a life in foster care” by John William Tuohy.

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Quotes from “No time to say goodbye: memoirs of a life in foster care” by John William Tuohy.


On sale now at Amazon.Com, Border Books and direct from LLR Books.Com
http://www.amazon.com/No-Time-Say-Goodbye-Memoir/dp/

********************
In 1962, six year old John Tuohy, his two brothers and two sisters entered Connecticut’s foster care system and were promptly split apart. Over the next ten years, John would live in more than ten foster homes, group homes and state schools, from his native Waterbury to Ansonia, New Haven, West Haven, Deep River and Hartford. In the end, a decade later, the state returned him to the same home and the same parents they had taken him from. As tragic as is funny compelling story will make you cry and laugh as you journey with this child to overcome the obstacles of the foster care system and find his dreams.
http://www.amazon.com/No-Time-Say-Goodbye-Memoir/dp/0692361294/
http://amemoirofalifeinfostercare.blogspot.com/

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
John William Tuohy is a writer who lives in Washington DC. He holds an MFA in writing from Lindenwood University. He is the author of numerous non-fiction on the history of organized crime including the ground break biography of bootlegger Roger Tuohy "When Capone's Mob Murdered Touhy" and "Guns and Glamour: A History of Organized Crime in Chicago."
His non-fiction crime short stories have appeared in The New Criminologist, American Mafia and other publications. John won the City of Chicago's Celtic Playfest for his work The Hannigan's of Beverly, and his short story fiction work, Karma Finds Franny Glass, appeared in AdmitTwo Magazine in October of 2008.
His play, Cyberdate.Com, was chosen for a public performance at the Actors Chapel in Manhattan in February of 2007 as part of the groups Reading Series for New York project. In June of 2008, the play won the Virginia Theater of The First Amendment Award for best new play.


Contact John:
MYWRITERSSITE.BLOGSPOT.COM
JWTUOHY95@GMAIL.COM


From Professor William Anthony Connolly

This incredible memoir, No Time to Say Goodbye, tells of entertaining angels, dancing with devils, and of the abandoned children many viewed simply as raining manna from some lesser god.
The young and unfortunate lives of the Tuohy bruins—sometimes Irish, sometimes Jewish, often Catholic, rambunctious, but all imbued with Lion’s hearts— is told here with brutal honesty leavened with humor and laudable introspective forgiveness.
The memoir will have you falling to your knees thanking that benevolent Irish cop in the sky, your lucky stars, or hugging the oxygen out of your own kids the fate foisted upon Johnny and his siblings does not and did not befall your own brood.
 John William Tuohy, a nationally-recognized authority on organized crime and Irish levity, is your trusted guide through the weeds the decades of neglect ensnared he and his brothers and sisters, all suffering for the impersonal and often mercenary taint of the foster care system.
Theirs, and Tuohy’s, story is not at all figures of speech as this review might suggest, but all too real and all too sad, and maddening. I wanted to scream. I wanted to get into a time machine, go back and adopt every last one of them. I was angry. I was captivated.
The requisite damning verities of foster care are all here, regretfully, but what sets this story above others is its beating heart, even a bruised and broken one, still willing to forgive and understand, and continue to aid its walking wounded. I cannot recommend this book enough

 “I am here because I worked too hard and too long not to be here. But although I told the university that I would walk across the stage to take my diploma, I won’t. At age fifty-seven, I’m too damned old, and I’d look ridiculous in this crowd. From where I’m standing in the back of the hall, I can see that I am at least two decades older than most of the parents of these kids in their black caps and gowns.
So I’ll graduate with this class, but I won’t walk across the stage and collect my diploma with them; I’ll have the school send it to my house. I only want to hear my name called. I’ll imagine what the rest would have been like. When you’ve had a life like mine, you learn to do that, to imagine the good things.
The ceremony is about to begin. It’s a warm June day and a hallway of glass doors leading to the parking lot are open, the dignitaries march onto the stage, a janitor slams the doors shut, one after the other.
That banging sound.
It’s Christmas Day 1961 and three Waterbury cops are throwing their bulk against our sorely overmatched front door. They are wearing their long woolen blue coats and white gloves and they swear at the cold.
They’ve finally come for us, in the dead of night, to take us away, just as our mother said they would.”
********************
 
“Otherwise, there were no long goodbyes or emotional scenes. That isn’t part of foster care. You just leave and you just die a little bit. Just a little bit because a little bit more of you understands that this is the way it’s going to be. And you grow hard around the edges, just a little bit. Not in some big way, but just a little bit because you have to, because if you don’t it only hurts worse the next time and a little bit more of you will die. And you don’t want that because you know that if enough little bits of you die enough times, a part of you leaves. Do you know what I mean? You’re still there, but a part of you leaves until you stand on the sidelines of life, simply watching, like a ghost that everyone can see and no one is bothered by. You become the saddest thing there is: a child of God who has given .”

  ********************

“As I said, you die a little bit in foster care, but I spose we all die a little bit in our daily lives, no matter what path God has chosen for us. But there is always a balance to that sadness; there’s always a balance. You only have to look for it. And if you look for it, you’ll see it. I saw it in a well-meaning nun who wanted to share the joy of her life’s work with us. I saw it in an old man in a garden who shared the beauty of the soil and the joy he took in art, and I saw it in the simple decency and kindness of an underpaid nurse’s aide. Yeah. Great things rain  on us. The magnificence of life’s affirmations are all around us, every day, everywhere. They usually go unnoticed because they seldom arrive with the drama and heartbreak of those hundreds of negative things that drain our souls. But yeah, it’s there, the good stuff, the stuff worth living for. You only have to look for it and when you see it, carry it around right there at the of your heart so it’s always there when you need it. And you’ll need it a lot, because life is hard.”
  ********************
“As sad as I so often was, and I was often overwhelmed with sadness, I never admitted it, and I don’t recall ever having said aloud that I was sad. I tried not to think about it, about all the sad things, because I had this feeling that if I started to think about it, that was all I would ever think of again. I often had a nightmare of falling  into a deep dark well that I could never climb out of. But then there was the other part of me that honestly believed I wasn’t sad at all, and I had little compassion for those who dwelled in sadness. Strange how that works. You would think that it would be the other way around.”

********************

 “In late October of 1962, it was our turn to go. Miss Hanrahan appeared in her state Ford Rambler, which, by that point, seemed more like a hearse than a nice lady’s car. Our belongings were packed in a brown bags. The ladies in the kitchen, familiar with our love of food, made us twelve fried-fish sandwiches each large enough to feed eight grown men and wrapped them in tinfoil for the ride ahead of us. Miss Louisa, drenched with tears, walked us to the car and before she let go of my hand she said, “When you a big, grown man, you come back and see Miss Louisa, you hear?”
“But,” I said, “you won’t know who I am. I’ll be big.”
“No, child,” she said as she gave me her last hug, “you always know forever the peoples you love. They with you forever. They don’t never leave you.”
She was right, of course. Those we love never leave us because we carry them with us in our hearts and a piece of us is within them. They change with us and they grow old with us and with time, they are a part of us, and thank God for that.”

********************

 “One day at the library I found a stack of record albums. I was hoping I’d find ta Beatles album, but it was all classical music so I reached for the first name I knew, Beethoven. I checked it out his Sixth Symphony and walked home. I didn’t own a record player and I don’t know why I took it out. I had Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony but nothing to play it on.”

********************

 “The next day, when I came home from the library, there was a small, used red record player in my room. I found my mother in the kitchen and spotted a bandage taped to her arm.
“Ma,” I asked. “Where did you get the money for the record player?”
“I had it saved,” she lied.
My father lived well, had a large house and an expensive imported car, wanted for little, and gave nothing. My mother lived on welfare in a slum and sold her blood to the Red Cross to get me a record player.
“Education is everything, Johnny,” she said, as she headed for the refrigerator to get me food. “You get smart like regular people and you don’t have to live like this no more.”
She and I were not hugging types, but I put my hand on her shoulder as she washed the dishes with her back to me and she said, in best Brooklynese, “So go and enjoy, already.” My father always said I was my mother’s son and I was proud of that. On her good days, she was a good and noble thing to be a part of.
That evening, I plugged in the red record player and placed it by the window. My mother and I took the kitchen chairs out to the porch and listened to Beethoven’s Sixth Symphony from beginning to end, as we watched the oil-stained waters of the Mad River roll by. It was a good night, another good night, one of many that have blessed my life.”

********************

“The next day I was driven to New York City to take the physical. It was one of the strangest things I’d ever seen. Several hundred young men, maybe even a thousand, in their skivvies, walking around an enormous room, all of us lost, dazed, and confused.
Some of these guys had dodged the draft and were there under the watchful eyes of dozens of federal marshals lined  against one of the walls. After eight hours of being poked, prodded, stuck, and poked again, I was given a large red envelope. I had been rejected. I had the respiratory problems of an old man, high blood pressure, partial loss of hearing, very bad teeth, very flat, very wide feet and I tested positive for tuberculosis.
“Frankly,” the doctor said, “I don’t know how the hell you’re even standing ,” and that was when the sergeant told me that if they bottled everything that was wrong with me “we could take over the world without a shot.”
********************

“I had decided that I wanted to earn my living as a writer and the only place in Waterbury where they paid you for writing was at the local newspaper. My opportunity came when the paper had an opening for a night janitor. Opportunities are easy to miss, because they don’t always show  in their best clothes. Sometimes opportunities look like beggars in rags. After an eight-hour shift in the shop tossing thirty-pound crates I hustled  to the newspaper building and cleaned toilets, with a vague plan that it would somehow lead to a reporter’s .”

********************

“One Friday afternoon at the close of the working day the idiot bosses in their fucking ties and suit coats came  and handed out pink slips to every other person on the floor. I got one. They were firing us. Then they turned and, without a word, went back to their offices. Corporate pricks.”

********************

“There is a sense of danger in leaving what you know, even if what you know isn’t much. These mill towns with their narrow lanes and often narrow minds were all I really knew and I feared that if I left it behind, I would lose it and not find anything to replace it. The other reason I didn’t want to go was because I wanted to be the kind of person who stays, who builds a stable and predictable life. But I wasn’t one of the people, nor would I ever be.
I had a vision for my life. It wasn’t clear, but it was beautiful and involved leaving my history and my poverty behind me. I wasn’t happy about who I was or where I was, but I didn’t worry about it. It didn’t define me. We’re always in the making. God always has us on his anvil, melting, bending and shaping us for another purpose.
It was time to change, to find a new purpose.”

********************

“I was tired of fighting the windstorm I was tossed into, and instead I would let go and ride with the winds of change. How bad could it be, compared to the life I knew? I was living life as if it were a rehearsal for the real thing. Another beginning might be rough at first, but any place worth getting to is going to have some problems. I wanted the good life, the life well lived, and you can’t buy that or marry into it. It’s there to be found, and it can be taken by those who want it and have the resolve to make it happen for themselves.”

********************

“Imagine being beaten  every day for something you didn’t do and yet, when it’s over, you keep on smiling. That’s what every day of Donald’s life was like. His death was a small death. No one mourned his passing; they merely agreed it was for the best that he be forgotten as quickly as possible, since his was a life misspent.”

********************

“Then there are all of those children, the ones who aren’t resilient. The ones who slowly, quietly die. I think the difference is that the kids who bounce back learn to bear a little bit more than they thought they could, and they soon understand that the secret to surviving foster care is to accept finite disappointments while never losing infinite hope. I think that was how Donald survived as long as he did, by never losing his faith in the wish that tomorrow would be better. But as time went by, day after day, the tomorrows never got better; they got worse, and he simply gave . In the way he saw the world, pain was inevitable, but no one ever explained to him that suffering was optional.”

********************

“In foster care it’s easier to measure what you’ve lost over what you have gained, because it there aren’t many gains in that life and you are a prisoner to someone else’s plans for your life.”

********************

“I developed an interest in major league baseball and the 1960s were, as far as I’m concerned (with a nod to the Babe Ruth era of the 1920s), the Golden Age of Baseball. Like most people in the valley, I was a diehard Yankees fan and, in a pinch, a Mets fan. They were New York teams, and most New Englanders rooted for the Boston Red Sox, but our end of Connecticut was geographically and culturally closer to New York than Boston, and that’s where our loyalties went.
And what was not to love? The Yankees ruled the earth in those days. The great Roger Maris set one Major League record after another and even he was almost always one hit shy of Mickey Mantle, God on High of the Green Diamond.”
********************

“For the first time in my life, I was eating well and from plates—glass plates, no less, not out of the frying pan because somebody lost all the plates in the last move. Now when we ate, we sat at a fine round oak table in sturdy chairs that matched. No one rushed through the meal or argued over who got the biggest portion, and we ate three times a day.”

********************

 “The single greatest influence in our lives was the church. The Catholic Church in the 1960s differs from what it is today, especially in the Naugatuck Valley, in those days an overwhelmingly conservative Catholic place.
I was part of what might have been the last generation of American Catholic children who completely and unquestioningly accepted the sernatural as real. Miracles happened. Virgin birth and transubstantiation made perfect sense. Mere humans did in fact, become saints. There was a Holy Ghost. Guardian angels walked beside us and our patron saints really did put in a good word for us every now and then.”

********************

“Henry read it and said, “A story has to have three things. They are a beginning, a middle and an end. They don’t have to be in that order. You can start a story at the end or end it in the middle. There are no rules on that except where you, the author, decide to put all three parts. Your story has a beginning and an end. But it’s good. Go put in a middle and bring it back to me.”
I went away encouraged, rewrote the story and returned it to him two days later. Again he looked it over and said, “It’s a good story but it lacks a bullet-between-the-eyes opening. Your stories should always have a knock-’em-dead opening.” Then, looking with exaggerated suspicion around the crime-prone denizens of the room with an exaggerated suspicion, he said loudly, “I don’t mean that literally.”

********************

“A few days after I began my short story, I returned to his desk and handed him my dates. He pushed his wire-rimmed reading glasses way  on his nose and focused on the two pages. “Okay, you got a beginning; you got yourself a middle and an end. You got a wing-dinger opening line. But you don’t have an establishing paragraph. Do you know what that is?”
He didn’t wait for me to answer.
“It’s kinda like an outdated road map for the reader,” he said. “It gives the reader a general idea of where you’re taking him, but doesn’t tell him exactly how you intend to get there, which is all he needs to know.”
********************

“I don’t know’,” he said. “Those three words from a willing soul are the start of a grand and magnificent voyage.” And with that he began a discourse that lasted for several weeks, covering scene-setting, establishing conflict, plot twists, and first- and third-person narration. [ I learned in these rapid-fire mini-dissertations that like most literature lovers I would come to know, Henry was a book snob. He assumed that if a current author was popular and widely enjoyed, then he or she had no merit. He made a few exceptions, such as Kurt Vonnegut, although that was mostly because Vonnegut lived on Cape Cod and so he probably had some merits as a human being, if not as a writer.
I think that the way Henry saw it was that he was not being a snob. In fact I would venture that in his view of things, snobbery had nothing to do with it. Rather, it was a matter of standards. It was bout quality in the author’s craftsmanship.”

********************

 “The foundries were vast, dark castles built for efficiency, not comfort. Even in the mild New England summers, when the warm air combined with the stagnant heat from the machines or open flames in the huge melting rooms where the iron was cast, the effects were overwhelming. The heat came in unrelenting waves and sucked the soul from your body. In the winter, the enormous factories were impossible to heat and frigid New England air reigned sreme in the long halls.
The work was difficult, noisy, mind-numbing, sometimes dangerous and highly regulated. Bathroom and lunch breaks were scheduled  to the second. There was no place to make a private phone call. Company guards, dressed in drab uniforms straight out of a James Cagney prison film [those films were in black and white, notoriously tough, weren’t there to guard company property. They were there to keep an eye on us.
No one entered or the left the building without punching in or out on a clock, because the doors were locked and opened electronically from the main office.”

********************

 “So he sings,” he continued as if Denny had said nothing. “His solo mio, that with her in his life he is rich because she is so beautiful that she makes the sun more beautiful, you understand?” And at that he dropped the hoe, closed his eyes and spread out his arms wide and with the fading sun shining on his handsome face he sang:
Che bella cosa è na jurnata 'e sole
n'aria serena doppo na tempesta!
Pe' ll'aria fresca pare già na festa
Che bella cosa e' na jurnata 'e sole
Ma n'atu sole,
cchiù bello, oi ne'
'O sole mio
sta 'nfronte a te!
'O sole, 'o sole mio
sta 'nfronte a te!
sta 'nfronte a te!
It looked like fun. We dropped our tools and joined him, belting out something that sounded remarkably like Napolitano. We sang as loud as we could, holding on to each note as long as we could before we ran out of breath, and then we sang again, occasionally dropping to one knee, holding our hands over our hearts with exaggerated looks of deep pain. Although we made the words , we sang with the deepest passion, with the best that we had, with all of our hearts, and that made us artists, great artists, for in that song, we had made all that art is: the creation of something from nothing, fashioned with all of the soul, born from joy.
And as that beautiful summer sun set over Waterbury, the Brass City, the City of Churches, our voices floated above the wonderful aromas of the garden, across the red sky and joined the spirits in eternity.”

********************

“It didn’t last long. Not many good things in a foster kid’s life last long. One day, Maura was gone. Her few things were packed in paper bags and a tearful Miss Louisa carried her out to Miss Hanrahan’s black state-owned Ford sedan with the state emblem on the door, and she was gone. The state had found a foster home that would take a little girl but couldn’t take the rest of us. There were no long goodbyes. She was just gone. I remember having an enormous sense of helplessness when they took her. Maura didn’t know where she were going or long she would be there. She was just gone”

********************

“After another second had passed I added, “But you’re pretty, pretty,” and as soon as I said it I thought, “Pretty, pretty? John, you’re an idiot.” But she squeezed my hand and when I looked at her I saw her entire lovely face was aglow with a wonderful smile, the kind of smile you get when you have won something.
“Why do you rub your fingers together all the time?” she asked me, and I felt the breath leave my body and gasped for air. She had seen me do my crazy finger thing, my affliction. I clenched my teeth while I searched for a long, exaggerated lie to tell her about why I did what I did. I didn’t want to be the crazy kid with tics, I wanted to be James Bond 007, so slick ice avoided me.
“It’s okay,” she said. “I bite my nails, see?” and she showed me the backs of her hands. Her finger nails were painted a color I later learned was puce.
“My Dad, he blinks all the time, he doesn’t know why either,” she continued. She looked  her feet and said, “I shouldn’t have asked you that. I’m really nervous and I say stid things when I’m nervous. I’m a girl and this is my first date, and for girls this really is a very big deal.”
I understood completely. I was so nervous I couldn’t feel my toes, so I started moving them  and  to make sure they were still there.
“It’s all right,” I said. “I don’t know why I do that with my fingers; it’s a thing I do.”
“Well, you’re really cute when you do it,” she said.
“I know,” I said, and I don’t know why I said it, but I did.”

********************

“So began my love affair with books. Years later, as a college student, I remember having a choice between a few slices of pizza that would have held me over for a day or a copy of On the Road. I bought the book. I would have forgotten what the pizza tasted like, but I still remember Kerouac.
The world was mine for the reading. I traveled with my books. I was there on a tramp steamer in the North Atlantic with the Hardy Boys, piecing together an unsolvable crime. I rode into the Valley of Death with the six hundred and I stood at the graves of Uncas and Cora and listened to the mournful song of the Lenni Linape. Although I braved a frozen death at Valley Forge and felt the spin of a hundred bullets at Shiloh, I was never afraid. I was there as much as you are where you are, right this second. I smelled the gunsmoke and tasted the frost. And it was good to be there. No one could harm me there. No one could punch me, slap me, call me stid, or pretend I wasn’t in the room. The other kids raced through books so they could get the completion stamp on their library card. I didn’t care about that stid completion stamp. I didn’t want to race through books. I wanted books to walk slowly through me, stop, and touch my brain and my memory. If a book couldn’t do that, it probably wasn’t a very good book. Besides, it isn’t how much you read, it’s what you read.
What I learned from books, from young Ben Franklin’s anger at his brother to Anne Frank’s longing for the way her life used to be, was that I wasn’t alone in my pain. All that caused me such anguish affected others, too, and that connected me to them and that connected me to my books. I loved everything about books. I loved that odd sensation of turning the final page, realizing the story had ended, and feeling that I was saying a last goodbye to a new friend.”

********************

“I had developed a very complicated and little-understood disorder called misophonia, which means “hatred of sound.” Certain sounds act as triggers that turn me from a Teddy bear into an agitated grizzly bear. People with misophonia are annoyed, sometimes to the point of rage, by ordinary sounds such as people eating, breathing, sniffing, or coughing, certain consonants, or repetitive sounds. Those triggers, and there are dozens of them, set off anxiety and avoidant behaviors.
What is a mild irritation for most people -- the person who keeps sniffling, a buzzing fly in a closed room—those are major irritants to people with misophonia because we have virtually no ability to ignore those sounds, and life can be a near constant bombardment of noises that bother us. I figured out that the best way to cope was to avoid the triggers. So I turned off the television at certain sounds and avoided loud people. All of these things gave me a reputation as a high-strung, moody and difficult child. I knew my overreactions weren’t normal. My playmates knew it”

********************

“Sometimes in the midst of our darkest moments it’s easy to forget that it’s  to us to turn on the light, but that’s what I did. I switched on the light, the light of cognizance.”

********************

 “I don’t know what I would have done if they had hugged me. I probably would have frozen in place, become stiff. It took most of my life to overcome my distaste for physical contact and not to stiffen when I was touched, or flinch, twitch, fidget, and eventually figure out how to move away. I learned to accept being hugged by my children when they were infants. Their joy at seeing me enter a room was real and filled with true love and affection and it showed in their embraces. Like a convert, when I learned the joy and comfort of being hugged by and hugging those I loved, I became a regular practitioner.”

********************

“Most people don’t understand how mighty the power of touch is, how mighty a kind word can be, how important a listening ear is, or how giving an honest compliment can move the child who has not known those things, only watched them from afar. As insignificant as they can be, they have the power to change a life.”

********************
 “They were no better than common thieves. They stole our childhood. But even with that, I was heartbroken that I would not know the Wozniaks anymore, the only people who came close to being parents to me. I would be conscious of their absence for the rest of my life. I needed them. You know, if you think about it, we all need each other. But even with all of the evidence against the Wozniaks, I had conflicted emotions about them, then and now. They were the closest I had to a real family and real parents.
But now I was bankrt of any feelings at all towards them at all.
I felt then, and feel now, a great sense of loss. I felt as if I were burying them. when I never really had them to lose in the first place. Disillusioned is probably a better word. In fact the very definition of disillusionment is a sense of loss for something you never had. When you are disillusioned and disappointed enough times, you shoping. That’s what happens to many foster kids. We become loners, not because we enjoy the solitude, but because we let people into our lives and they disappoint us. So we close  and travel alone. Even in a crowd, we’re alone.
Because I survived, I was one of the lucky ones. Why is it so hard to articulate love, yet so easy to express disappointment?”

********************

“My first and lasting impression of the Connecticut River Valley is its serene beauty, especially in the autumn months. Deep River was a near picture-perfect New England village. When I arrived there, the town was a typical working-class place, nothing like the trendy per-income enclave it became. The town center had a cluster of shops, a movie theater open only on weekends, several white-steepled churches (none of them Catholic), the town hall, and a Victorian library. It was small, even by Ansonia standards.”

********************

 “While I may not have been a bastion of good mental health, many of these boys were on their way to becoming crazier than they already were. Most couldn’t relate to other people socially at all, because they only dealt inappropriately with other people or didn’t respond to overtures of friendship or even engage in basic conversations.
Some became too familiar with you too fast, following their new, latest friend everywhere, including the showers, insisting on giving you items that were dear to them and sharing everything else. They also had the awful habit of touching other people, putting their hands on you as a sign of affection or friendship, and for people like myself, with my affliction and disdain for being touched unless I wanted to be touched, these guys were a nightmare. It was often difficult to get word in edgewise with these kids, and when I did, they interrted me—not in some obnoxious way, but because they wanted to be included in every single aspect of everything you did.
The other ones, the stone-cold silent ones, reacted with deep suspicion toward even the slightest attempt to befriend them or the smallest show of kindness. If you touched some of these children, even accidentally, they would warn you to back away. They didn’t care what others thought of them or anything else, and almost all their talk concerned punching and hurting and maiming.
I noticed that most of these kids, the ones who were truly damaged, were eventually filtered out of St. John’s to who knows where. Institutions have a way of protecting themselves from future problems.”

********************

“Jesus,” I prayed silently, “please fix it so that my turn to read won’t come around.”
And then the nun called my name, but before I stood I thought, “I’ll bet you think this is funny, huh, Jesus?”
I stood and stared at the sentence assigned to me and believed that, through some miracle, I would suddenly be able to read it and not be humiliated. I stood there and stared at it until the children started giggling and snickering and Sister told me to sit.”

********************

 “My affliction decided to join us, forcing me to push my toes on the floor as though I were trying to eject myself from the chair. I prayed she didn’t notice what the affliction was making me do. I half expected to be eaten alive or murdered and buried out back in the school yard.
“I’m not afraid of you, ya know,” I said, although I was terrified of her. The words hurt her, but that wasn’t my intent. She turned her face and looked out the window into North Cliff Street. She knew what her face and twisted body looked like, and she probably knew what the kids said about her. It was probably an open wound for her and I had just tossed salt into it.
I was instantly ashamed of what I done and tried to correct myself. I didn’t mean to be hurtful, because I knew what it was like to be ridiculed for something that was beyond one’s control, such as my affliction, and how it made me afraid to touch the chalk because the feel of chalk to people like me is overwhelming. If I had to write on the blackboard, I held the chalk with the cuff of my shirt and the class laughed.
“You look good in a nun’s suit,” I said. It was a stid thing to say, but I meant well by it. She looked  at the black robe as if she were seeing it for the first time.”

********************

“Jews were a frequent topic of conversation with all of the Wozniaks, which was surprising, since none of them had any contact at all with anything even remotely Jewish.
While watching television, Walter would point out who was and who was not Jewish and Helen’s frequent comment when watching the television news was, “And won’t the Jews be happy about that!” To bargain with a merchant for a lower price was to “Jew him ,” and that sort of thing.
Walter’s mother and father were far worse. They despised the Jews and blamed them for everything from the start of World War I to the Kennedy assassination to the rising price of beef.
I didn’t pay much heed to any of this. It wasn’t my problem, and if I were to think through all the ethnic, racial and religious barbs the Wozniaks threw out in the course of a week, I’d think about nothing else.
After being told about a part of my mother’s heritage, the Wozniaks began their verbal and cultural assault against us. As odd as it sounds, they might not always have intended to be mean.”

********************

“Explaining the Jews in a Catholic school when you’re Irish is like having to explain your country’s foreign policy while on a vacation in France. You don’t know what you’re talking about and no matter what you say, they’re not going to like it anyway.”

********************

 “You could read the story of his entire life on his face in one glance.”

********************

 “As interesting as that was, it didn’t inspire me. What did was that here was a Jew who was tough with his fists, a Jew who fought back. The only Jews I had ever heard of surrendered or were beaten by the Romans, the Egyptians, or the Nazis. You name it, it seemed like everyone on earth at some point had taken their turn slapping the Jews around. But not Benny Leonard. I figured you’d have to kill Benny Leonard before he surrendered.”

********************

“One afternoon Walter brought Izzy to the house for lunch and, pointing to me, he said to Izzy, “He’s one of your tribe.”
Dobkins lifted his head to look at me and after a few seconds said, “I don’t see it.”
“The mother’s a Jew,” Walter answered, as if he were describing the breeding of a mongrel dog.
“Then you are a Jew,” Izzy said, and sort of blessed me with his salami sandwich.”

********************

“Sometimes a man must stand for what is right and sometimes you must simply walk away and suffer the babblings of weak-minded fools or try to change their minds. It’s like teachin’ a pig to sing. It is a waste of your time and it annoys the pig.”

********************

 “Father, I can’t take this,” I said.
“Why not?”
“Because you’re a priest, Father.”
“And my money’s no good because of it? What are you? A member of the Masonic Lodge?”
“Naw, Father,” I said. “I just feel guilty taking money from you.”
“Well, you’re Irish and Jewish. You have to feel guilty over somethin’, don’t ya? Take the money and be happy ye have it.”
― John William Tuohy, No time to say goodbye: memoirs of a life n foster care

********************

 “I caddied—more accurately, I drove the golf cart—for Father O’Leary and his friends throughout most of the summer of that year. I was a good caddie because I saw nothing when they passed the bottle of whiskey and turned a deaf ear to yet another colorful reinvention of the words “motherless son of a bitch from hell” when the golf ball betrayed them.”

********************

“Weeks turned into months and a year passed, but I didn’t miss my parents. I missed the memory of them. I assumed that part of my life was over. I didn’t understand that I was required to have an attachment to them, to these people I barely knew. Rather, it was my understanding that I was sposed to switch my attachment to my foster parents. So I acted on that notion and no one corrected me, so I assumed that what I was doing was good and healthy.”

********************

“I felt empty a lot and I sometimes had a sense—and I know this sounds strange—that I really had no existence as my own person, that I could disappear and no one would notice or remember that I had ever existed. It is a terrifying thing to live with. I kept myself busy to avoid that feeling, because somehow being busy made me feel less empty.”

********************

“Denny thought our parents needed a combination of material goods and temperamental changes before he could return home.
“If Dad buys Ma a car, then she’ll love him, and they’ll get back together and she won’t be all crazy anymore,” he said. For years he held out the possibility that those things would happen and all would change. “If we had more things, like stoves and cars,” he told me at night in our bedroom, “and Ma wasn’t like she is, we could go home.”

********************

 “Because we were raised in a bigoted and hate-filled home, we simply assumed that calling someone a “cheap Jew” or saying someone “Jewed him ” were perfectly acceptable ways to communicate. Or at least we did until the day came when I called one of the cousins, a Neanderthal DeRosa boy, “a little Jew,” and he told me he wasn’t the Jew, that I was the Jew, and he even got Helen and Nana to confirm it for him.
It came as a shock to me to find out we were a part of this obviously terrible tribe of skinflint, trouble-making, double-dealing, shrewdly smart desert people. When Denny found out, he was crestfallen because he had assumed that being Jewish meant, according to what his former foster family the Skodiens had taught him, a life behind a desk crunching numbers. “And I hate math,” he said, shaking his head.
So here we were, accused Jews living in a hotbed of anti-Semitism. Not a good situation. Walter’s father was the worst. Learning about our few drops of Jewish blood seemed to ignite a special, long-held hatred in him. He became vile over nothing, finding any excuse to deride the Jews in front of us until Helen made him stop. We didn’t know what to make of it, except to write it off as another case of Wozniak-inspired insanity, but as young as we were, we could tell that at some point in his life he had crossed swords with a Jew someplace and came out on the losing end and we were going to pay for it. But because we really didn’t feel ourselves to be Jews, it didn’t sink in that he intended to hurt us with his crazy tirades. As I said, it’s hard to insult somebody when they don’t understand the insult, and it’s equally hard to insult them when they out and out refuse to be insulted.
Word got around quickly.”

********************

“I hit him for every single thing that was wrong in my life and kicked him in a fierce fury of madness as he sobbed and covered his face and screamed. I hit him because Walter hit me and I hit him because I hated my life and I hit him because I just wanted to go home and I hit him because I didn’t know where home was.”
********************

 “I also told him about the dramatic, vivid verbal picture of God that the nuns drew for us—an enormous, slightly dangerous and very touchy guy with white hair and a long white beard.
“It’s all the talk of feeble minds,” he whispered to me in confidence. “Those nuns know as much about prayer as they do about sex. Listen to me, now. God is everywhere and alive in everything, while them nuns figured God is as good as dead, a recluse in a permanently bad mood. Well, I refuse to believe that to my God, my maker and creator, my life is little more than a dice game.” He stopped and turned and looked at me and said, “Never believe that a life full of sin puts you on a direct route to hell. Even if you only know a little bit about God, you learn pretty quick that he’s big on U-turns, dead stops and starting over again.”
As each day passes and my memories of Father O’Leary and Sister Emmarentia fade, and I can no longer recall their faces or the sounds of their voices as clearly as I could a decade ago, what remains, clear and uncluttered, are the lessons I took from them.”

********************

 “Eventually, many years later, I came to see him the way everyone else saw him—a nice guy who, despite all the damage he did to us, wasn’t a bad man, not inherently bad, anyway. He just wasn’t very bright, and was in over his head on almost every level of life. He was capable of only so much and not a drop more, and because he seemed so harmless and lost, people not only liked him, they protected him.
My mother, despite her poverty, left the opposite impression. She left no doubt that she was psychologically tough and mentally sharp, and because of that the Wozniaks disliked her.
And that was another difference between my mother and father. My father was a whiner, a complainer, a perpetually unhappy man unable to comprehend the simple fact that sometimes life is unfair. My mother never complained, and yet her poverty-stricken life was miserable. She never carried on about the early death of her raging alcoholic mother, or the father who raped her, or of a diet dictated by the restrictions of food stamps.”
********************


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Attorneys for ‘Goodfellas’ mobster want rap sheet off limits

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By Selim Algar
July 2, 2015 | 11:59pm

Attorneys for accused Lufthansa-heist wiseguy Vincent Asaro don’t want jurors to hear about his decades-long rap sheet, according to a new Brooklyn federal court filing.
The Bonanno crime-family veteran — who faces life in prison if convicted on a slew of mob-related allegations — is charged with playing a key role in the legendary 1978 robbery of a JFK cargo terminal.
The heist was immortalized in Martin Scorsese’s 1990 mob classic, “Goodfellas.”
The feds want jurors to hear about large chunks of Asaro’s voluminous criminal catalog — even including a serious heroin addiction in his 20s and a propensity for car theft in the 1960s.
But defense attorney Elizabeth Macedonio ripped the effort, arguing that the ancient activity would prejudice the jury against Asaro.
“The illegal propensity evidence consists of decades-old acts designed to arouse the jury’s emotions and invite it to convict on an improper basis,” she wrote.
The feds maintain that the increasingly wobbly mafioso, now 79, blew much of his alleged haul from the Lufthansa job at horse-race tracks.



Bingo just wasn’t going to cut it for this aging Bonanno.

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A Brooklyn federal judge scolded a geriatric mobster for violating his supervised release by meeting up with old criminal colleagues after getting out of jail for attempted murder.
After sentencing reputed Bonanno Bronx street boss Jack Palazzolo, 77, to a year and a day behind bars, Judge Nicholas Garaufis lectured the teetering hoodlum for falling back into his life of crime.
“The court is extremely concerned about the behavior that brings us to this day,” Garaufis said. “It’s rather astonishing that a person in your medical condition, Mr. Palazzolo, would be engaged in meeting with persons who are maybe involved in organized criminal activities.”
Palazzolo served 10 years in prison before his 2012 release. He was arrested in March for convening with several of his old cohorts in what the feds assert was a bid to take over a Queens Bonanno crew.
The frail thug, who hobbled into court and used a chair during the proceeding, claims that he suffers from several undisclosed medical ailments.
“Instead of your family taking care of you, you now have the United States Bureau of Prisons taking care of you,” Garuafis said.
The geezer gangster’s probation officer told the court that he repeatedly warned him against sidling up to his old pals.

“I was trying to avoid getting us to this point,” said Lawrence Goldman.

Raynald Desjardins pleads guilty to conspiracy in Salvatore Montagna murder 2011 killing thought to be tied to turf war for control of Montreal Mafia

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Raynald Desjardins, who was arrested in December 2011 and charged with 1st-degree murder in the shooting death of Salvatore Montagna, has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder.
A former lieutenant of the Rizzuto crime family has pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit murder.
Raynald Desjardins has admitted to his role in the death of mob boss Salvatore Montagna in November 2011.
The killing is thought to be tied to a turf war for control of the Montreal Mafia.
Desjardins was initially charged with first-degree murder in connection with Montagna's death.
Seven other men were eventually charged.
Desjardins was himself the suspected target of an assassination attempt in September 2011.
Two months later, Montagna, a former New York Mafia boss who was deported from the U.S., came to Montreal and is thought to have tried to take over the city's Mob, was gunned down in an SUV in Laval, north of Montreal.
Montagna's body was found in Quebec's Assomption River.
Marc Labelle, Desjardin's lawyer, said his client worked out a plea bargain with the Crown, and it was important for Desjardins that some of the charges against him were dropped.
The details of Desjardin's plea are covered by a publication ban. He's due to be sentenced in December.
Conspiracy to commit murder carries a maximum sentence of life in prison.
Ties to construction industry
Desjardins previously spent twelve years in prison starting in 1993 on a drug charge.
Since his release in 2005 he has been increasingly involved in Quebec's construction industry.
His name came up frequently at the Charbonneau commission as an associate of top officials with the province's FTQ construction union.
Desjardins was to testify at the commission but he fought that in court and eventually commission lawyers dropped their request.
Nicknamed "Sal the Iron Worker," Montagna owned and operated a successful steel business in the U.S.
The FBI once called him the acting boss of the Bonanno crime family — prompting one of New York's tabloids to dub him the "Bambino Boss" because of his rise to power in his mid-30s.


Alleged Wiseguy Appealing Shamrock Bar Murders

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•           Michael V. Cusenza
•           Crime/Courts
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•           The Gambino crime family captain who was convicted in 2013 of murdering the two owners of the Shamrock Bar in Woodhaven over a spilled drink is appealing the guilty verdict, according to a report.
Bartolomeo “Bobby Glasses” Vernace was convicted two years ago of a racketeering conspiracy spanning 1978 through 2011. As part of the conspiracy, Vernace participated in nine racketeering acts, federal prosecutors said, including heroin trafficking, robbery, loansharking, illegal gambling, and the 1981 double homicide of bar owners Richard Godkin and John D’Agnese.
On April 11, 1981, Vernace and two Gambino associates murdered the men after a dispute arose between a Gambino family associate and others in the bar over a spilled drink. The associate left the bar and picked up Vernace and a third accomplice at a nearby social club. A short time later, the three men entered the bar and gunned down Godkin and D’Agnese as the bar’s patrons fled for cover, according to prosecutors.
However, a Gangland News report indicated that a federal appeals court has already begun to look into reams of documents filed on Vernace’s behalf. According to Gangland News Founder and columnist Jerry Capeci, defense attorney Seth Ginsberg has pointed out that Vernace was acquitted of the murders when city prosecutors tried him, and so the federal murder conviction should be tossed “because it violated Justice Department guidelines against using racketeering laws for state crimes ‘unless the pattern of racketeering activity … has some relation to the purpose of the enterprise.’”
Ginsberg argued that the shooting had nothing to do with Gambino business, but rather the product of a bar dispute.
A Second Circuit panel is scheduled to hear oral arguments about the conviction in September, Capeci said.
Vernace, described by authorities as a powerful member of the administration of the Gambino family, was arrested on Jan. 20, 2011, as part of an historic national sweep of almost 100 members and associates of organized crime led by the Department of Justice and Federal Bureau of Investigation.


The Mob's IT Department

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How two technology consultants helped drug traffickers hack the Port of Antwerp

 By Jordan Robertson and Michael Riley
Illustrations by Ray Jones
July 7, 2015 |

 From  Bloom berg Business Reports

As Davy Van De Moere steered his Subaru along a back road at the Port of Antwerp, he was sure he was being followed. It was a warm day in August 2012, and the city’s industrial skyline stretched into the distance, mile after mile of towering dockside cranes. Unable to find his tail amid the rail lines and mountains of shipping containers, Van De Moere continued to his target: a squat office building whose parking lot was half-filled with workers taking cigarette breaks and napping in their cars.
Van De Moere parked, popped the hood on his battered Impreza, and connected the battery to an antenna, a white plastic rod about 6 inches long. The device began searching for a secret network inside DP World, a Dubai-based port operator with offices on the third floor of the building.
A few days earlier, small USB drives had been inserted into the company’s computers. They were programmed to intercept the nine-digit PINs that controlled access to DP World’s shipping containers. Besides fruit, metals, and other legitimate cargo, some of these containers carried millions of euros in heroin and cocaine. To get their drugs out of the port, often traffickers use low-tech methods: They hire runners to jump fences, break open containers, and sprint away before guards can catch them, earning as much as €10,000 ($11,200) a trip. Stealing PIN codes is more elegant and less risky. Whoever has the codes can pull into the terminal, enter the PIN into a keypad, wait as robot-controlled loaders put the container on their truck, and drive off—sometimes minutes ahead of the cargo’s legitimate owner.
As the minutes ticked by, Van De Moere could hardly believe what he was doing. He didn’t think of himself as a criminal. A year ago, Van De Moere—short, ponytailed, perpetually cheery—had been an ordinary information technology consultant in his native Belgium, earning a comfortable salary setting up digital voice networks for corporations. Now he was working with a Dutch drug-trafficking gang, deep into an audacious hacking scheme that authorities say smuggled tons of cocaine and heroin through the port and into cities across the continent. If the antenna worked and he got the codes, he had a chance to get his normal life back. If he screwed up, he could end up in prison or in a coffin.
The Wi-Fi antenna failed. The traffickers would be angry. Van De Moere closed the Subaru’s hood and drove away. He had only himself to blame. Himself, and his best friend, Filip Maertens.
 Maertens and Van De Moere grew up five miles apart in small towns in western Belgium, Maertens in Tielt and Van De Moere in Ardooie. Born in 1978, they favored computers and music over soccer, which made them outsiders. They met at 14, when Maertens hacked Van De Moere’s online bulletin board, Bad Habit, named after a song by the Offspring. Van De Moere angrily challenged Maertens to settle their differences in the schoolyard. He backed down when he saw that Maertens was two heads taller than he. They talked instead. Maertens, who was confident, charming, and moody, described the bug he exploited to hack the site. They became friends, meeting regularly to discuss PCs, swap books on programming, and fumble their way through Metallica guitar solos in Maertens’s garage.
By 18, they’d founded an Internet Relay Chat channel called Securax, which became a popular home for Belgium’s fledgling hacker community, at one point boasting almost 100,000 subscribers. As their fame grew, Van De Moere and Maertens became sought-after commentators for Belgian media, and they were eventually hired by Ernst & Young to audit computer networks.
Their careers went in different directions, with Van De Moere building Internet voice networks and Maertens getting into security consulting, but they stayed close and helped each other out of jams. When Maertens double-booked meetings, Van De Moere gave presentations for him—even sometimes as him. When Van De Moere’s startup, Attractel, got in financial trouble, Maertens quit his job, became chief executive officer, and helped raise money. (The company folded during the 2008 financial crisis.) The pair literally trusted their lives to each other during rock-climbing and extreme mountaineering expeditions.
By the middle of 2011, each was living comfortably. Van De Moere was chief technology officer of Mondial Telecom, a Belgian mobile software company, making €12,000 a month. Maertens was making €20,000 a month consulting, including a project to help ING, the Dutch bank, build a mobile banking platform. Then he got an itch that would end the peaceful part of their lives.
According to prosecutors in the Netherlands and Belgium, what happened next transformed the pair into masterminds of one of the biggest drug-smuggling operations in Europe. The case, detailed in thousands of pages of police reports and court records, allegedly shows how mobsters and hackers teamed up to commit sophisticated crime, manipulating global logistical and transportation networks for huge gain. The hackers’ version of events, which they laid out as they wait for their fate to be determined later this year by Belgian authorities, differs sharply: a story of two men who became pawns of a violent group through coercion and a series of very bad decisions.
That summer, Maertens had an idea for a smartphone data-mining startup and began cold-calling potential investors. A friend put him in touch with Orhan Adibelli, a businessman in the Netherlands with an interest in technology. Their first meetings were in the lobby of a fashionable hotel near Rotterdam, where Adibelli, a stylish Turk in his 40s, ran an import-export company called Ogear Trading. It was based in the suburb of Barendrecht. Favoring a brown leather vest, expensive jeans, and button-up shirts, the mustachioed Adibelli hand-rolled cigarettes with astonishing dexterity and was cavalier about money. He didn’t blink when Maertens said he was looking for an investment of more than €1 million. That would have valued Maertens’s untested company, Argus Labs, at more than €5 million, which other potential investors thought too high.
Maertens was eager to prove his business skills. When Adibelli said he was building an office, Maertens offered to help procure and install computer equipment. When Adibelli said he wanted to invest in the cement industry, Maertens introduced him to two CEOs in the field. As the courtship deepened, Maertens visited the investor’s Rotterdam apartment, and they scouted office space for Argus Labs at an Antwerp high-rise, according to police records.
After months of negotiations, Adibelli abruptly called the deal off in December 2011, but not before introducing Maertens to an associate. Stocky and built like a street fighter, Ahmet Okul was a Turkish national who ran the Euro Spyshop, a store full of eavesdropping gear in the Dutch town of Arnhem. He told Maertens he was Adibelli’s technical adviser. For geek cred, Okul wore a T-shirt from Def Con, a popular hacking conference in Las Vegas, and he and Maertens hit it off discussing interception equipment. Okul loved to talk about hacking. He grilled Maertens about penetration testing, where companies pay white-hat hackers to break into their own networks, and about “pwnie” devices, which are minicomputers disguised as power strips and Internet routers that can go unnoticed in an office while intercepting network data. Pronounced pony, the name is a play on the hacker slang of “pwning,” or owning, someone else’s device.
Aside from his consulting job with ING and his Argus startup, Maertens had another gig, occasionally giving classes on hacking techniques to clients that included the Belgian government’s computer crime squad. Still hopeful that Adibelli might eventually invest in his company, he began giving Okul private hacking lessons, charging him at least €1,000 a class, according to police.
One day, Okul said he wanted to obtain a pwnie for a client. Maertens demurred. A week later, Adibelli called. Get to Barendrecht for a meeting, he told Maertens. Immediately.
By the time they understood what they were involved in, they were already implicated.
 Adibelli’s office, located next to a coroner on a quiet street, was sparsely decorated. The first floor held a handful of desks where during the day employees discussed fruit shipments. The export-import company’s name appeared nowhere. The sole decoration was a poster of a dozen varieties of mangoes. Visitors and employees had to leave their cell phones before going upstairs.
There, Maertens found Adibelli, Okul, and two men with greasy hair and powerful builds.
Maertens was told he’d failed to answer several urgent calls from Okul, costing his customers—presumably the two unnamed men—a lot of money. Scared and befuddled, Maertens denied the accusation and got up to go. Okul threw him against the wall, and Adibelli punched him repeatedly in the chest and stomach. He hobbled away with dark purple and red bruising across his torso. Driving home, Maertens called his best friend and asked for help.
He and Van De Moere discussed going to the police. They later explained they dismissed the idea out of fear. These were clearly men who didn’t resolve disagreements with the usual conference call or attorney’s letter. Calling the authorities would anger them more. They decided the prudent course was to let the whole bizarre incident go and hope Maertens never heard from them again.
But Adibelli phoned a week later. He was chatty and friendly, asking how Maertens’s New Year’s celebrations were. And he requested another meeting in Barendrecht. Scared to say no, Maertens went, bringing Van De Moere along as his wheelman in case he had to escape quickly.
Upstairs, Okul got right to the point: He said he was sending malware by e-mail and that too many of his messages failed. Van De Moere had planned to stay out of sight, but Adibelli and Okul noticed the conspicuous whine of his Subaru driving up and down the street. Maertens admitted it was his friend and motioned out the second-floor window for him to come up. Van De Moere took a long time to think before he rang the buzzer.
Over coffee and cigarettes, Adibelli and Okul were disarmingly casual. They kept discussing hacking and pwnies as if Van De Moere—a stranger to them—hadn’t entered the room. Okul said he needed a new way to intercept e-mail, and he asked Maertens to build him a pwnie that could be ready in a few weeks.
On the drive back to Belgium, Van De Moere and Maertens sized up their dilemma. Kids in Antwerp grow up inundated with news stories about shady shipping companies pushing narcotics through the port, and the friends now had little doubt that Adibelli and Okul were somehow involved in the drug trade. They’d already decided that going to the police wasn’t an option, they later explained, so they rationalized. Building pwnies isn’t itself a crime; anyone can buy a version on the Internet. As long as they were only supplying a device and not operating it for whatever scheme Adibelli and Okul had in mind, the pair concluded they wouldn’t be breaking the law.
The device they built looked like a European version of a power strip. Tucked inside a 15-by-5-inch casing was a tiny Linux computer running powerful hacking software called Metasploit. The pwnie sent out data via cellular networks, which meant they could be accessed from anywhere.
Several weeks after delivery, Okul couldn’t get the device to work. Maertens and Van De Moere were summoned to Barendrecht, and this time Adibelli flashed a holstered handgun. He pointed to a newspaper story about a murder, the latest in a spasm of trafficking violence engulfing Belgium and the Netherlands. “You don’t know who you’re f---ing with,” Adibelli said. “If you don’t do what we want, there will be casualties.” Adibelli pushed a white plastic bag across the table and instructed the pair to try again. He assured them that what was inside would motivate them to make the pwnie work. On the drive home, they found €25,000 in small bills.
Adibelli was clever, recruiting Van De Moere and Maertens the way a spymaster develops a double agent. By the time they understood what they were involved in, they were already implicated. But as it became clear they weren’t about to be let go, they devised an ambitious plot of their own, hoping to dodge the mobsters and police alike. Was it so crazy to think it might work? After all, they figured, the criminals had hired them for their brains.
Maertens was desperate. He shaved his head, claiming he'd been diagnosed with a brain tumor.
 For all of Okul’s hacker talk, his technical expertise was thin. At one meeting, he showed off a device meant to block nearby cell signals and thwart eavesdropping. It worked for about five minutes, then the signals popped back up. The friends had a flash of inspiration: Okul screwed up all the time, and he wasn’t dead. Failure, Maertens and Van De Moere realized, was an option.
The pair decided to bluff. By misconfiguring devices or making other small sabotages, they thought, they could look like they were cooperating without doing much harm, and the mobsters would eventually fire them and move on.
Over the next several months, they built more pwnies, all deficient in small ways. One would trigger security alerts when placed on any network protected by antivirus software. Another would reboot automatically anytime someone accessed it. When Okul asked to use Wi-Fi instead of 3G, Van De Moere lied and said there wasn’t enough capacity.
By June 2012, what was supposed to be a one-off deal had turned into almost full-time work. Maertens and Van De Moere were finding it difficult to meet the demands of their day jobs and Okul’s escalating needs. Okul called and texted constantly, peppering the pair with technical questions over special encrypted phones he’d provided.
One day, Van De Moere and Maertens were told to take an improved pwnie to a chic harborside bar in Antwerp called Hangar 41, where they were met by two men in mirrored aviators and expensive suits. The men showed off their lock-picking tools and bragged that they could enter any building unnoticed. They seemed to be the ones responsible for installing pwnies inside the shipping company offices. The men asked where the devices should be connected to capture the most data. Maertens and Van De Moere lied and said the printer.
The sabotage plan wasn’t working. Okul was relentless, assigning Van De Moere to teach the installers how to use pwnies and drive around picking up SIM cards and other equipment. The pair were increasingly desperate to get out. Van De Moere stopped answering texts; Maertens shaved his head, telling Adibelli he’d been diagnosed with a brain tumor.
One day in July, a muscled man in shorts and flip-flops came to the Argus Labs office and demanded Maertens come with him to meet Okul at Hangar 41. He issued the same order to Van De Moere by phone. Van De Moere lost his cool and started taunting the man. The caller responded by reciting the addresses of Van De Moere’s family members as well as Van De Moere’s own address, a remote farmhouse outside of Bruges where his wife was often alone.
Van De Moere floored it to Antwerp, making the hourlong drive in half the time, zooming past the flashes of freeway speed cameras. Okul got his start in organized crime as a “taxi driver”—an enforcer who transported people who’d fallen out of favor or behind on a debt to whatever fate awaited them, usually in the trunk of his car. At Hangar 41, he told Maertens and Van De Moere they were coming to Barendrecht to talk to Adibelli—and they could either follow him or ride in the trunk. They followed.
Once in Barendrecht, Adibelli threatened to put a bullet between Van De Moere’s eyes if he ignored Okul again. And then Okul gave Van De Moere a new job: He was to drive to specific office buildings to make sure the implanted devices were working properly.
 Adibelli came to the attention of Dutch authorities in the fall of 2011, when his apartment in Rotterdam was burglarized. Someone called the police; a search turned up signal-jamming devices, keylogging software, and eavesdropping equipment. Investigators also found a bill of lading for a shipping container from South America that had been loaded with cocaine and seized by police, as well as notes of a meeting with Maertens that referenced DP World and other shipping companies. Clues continued to pile up, but it would be more than a year before police began to connect Adibelli to the various tentacles of a vast trafficking operation at the port.
A breakthrough came in July 2012, when criminals took a container of zinc thought to hold Colombian cocaine to an industrial area south of Rotterdam, where they stopped for 10 minutes. According to court records, the address was a distribution hub for a Dutch drug-smuggling ring led by Frits Becker—aka “Mango” and the “man met de snor,” which translates as the “man with the mustache”—whom police had been trying to bring down for years. Then on July 30, port authorities seized more than 250 kilograms of cocaine inside a container, a discovery that led them down an unexpected path. They noticed a pattern of containers destined for a German company called South America Trading. It was a front. According to police records, the company was taking shipments of supposedly legitimate goods—towels and caustic soda from Pakistan, beans and nuts from Mozambique—and selling them to a company from the Netherlands called Ogear Trading, owned by Orhan Adibelli.
The Port of Antwerp handles 200 million metric tons of cargo a year. As the No. 1 transit point for South American fruit, it’s Europe’s largest port of entry for Colombian cocaine. Traditionally, the best way to get the drugs out was to bribe port officials, but a recent crackdown had proved effective. When containers began to show up outside the port abandoned, the drugs they presumably contained long gone, authorities started to suspect the smugglers had found a way around the port’s security system, which assigns each container the unique code available only to the proper shipper. Investigators were stumped until the fall of 2012, when employees of Mediterranean Shipping (MSC), a large Swiss shipper, began complaining about slow computers. Typed words were taking too long to appear on the screen.
Technicians found a bunch of surveillance devices on the network. There were two pwnies and a number of Wi-Fi keyloggers—small devices installed in USB ports of computers to record keystrokes—that the hackers were using as backups to the pwnies. MSC hired a private investigator, who called PricewaterhouseCoopers’ digital forensics team, which learned that computer hackers were intercepting network traffic to steal PIN codes and hijack MSC’s containers.
Police quietly reached out to other big port companies and found they’d been hit in the same way. One pwnie had been installed at MSC in June 2012, showed up at the Chilean shipper CSAV three weeks later, and placed back at MSC three weeks after that, according to police. MSC confirmed that its container-tracking systems were breached and that the company hired PwC to investigate and secure the network. The other shipping companies and port operators didn’t respond to requests for comment. DP World investigated an Aug. 15 break-in and found Wi-Fi keyloggers there as well. Surveillance video taken a few days later showed a man behaving strangely in the parking lot, an antenna hooked up to the battery of his Subaru. It was Van De Moere, wondering whether he was going to get out of this mess alive.
“Obviously, you know we’re not in a legal business. So if you talk to anyone, we know where you and your family live.”
 Prosecutors’ theory of the case is that Adibelli was an intelligence broker who sold PIN codes to Becker’s group and smuggled drugs on the side. Phone taps and financial records show drivers were paid as much as €5,000 per theft and would spend hours, sometimes a full day, waiting along the A58 highway for word that shipments had come in. Cell phone records reveal a passenger in Becker’s car texting and calling the drivers to give them the PIN codes.
In this view, Maertens and Van De Moere masterminded the hacking operation with Okul to make some quick money. Cell phone records show Maertens and Van De Moere meeting numerous times in Antwerp to drop off pwnies to the men who later the same nights would break into the shipping companies. The pair were caught on a phone tap discussing an antenna they ordered from China that never arrived. (Customs officials had intercepted it.) In late September 2012, investigators attached a tracking device to Van De Moere’s car, but they were foiled by an emergency engine repair that left the Subaru in the shop for a month.
When the hacking didn’t work, things ended badly. In one case, cocaine was hidden inside two containers of artichokes from Peru that were picked up by the rightful owner before the smugglers could get there with their stolen PIN. The truck driver was chased down the highway by attackers in Audis shooting Kalashnikovs.
By fall, Maertens and Van De Moere found themselves with little to do. The most plausible explanation is that the scheme had been exposed and port companies had removed the hacking tools from their networks. In September 2012, Adibelli summoned them to Barendrecht for another meeting.
In Belgium, guns were impossible for two IT consultants to get on short notice. So Van De Moere and Maertens each bought low-power commercial Tasers for protection. The night before the meeting, they practiced quick-drawing the Tasers in front of a mirror.
They drove the next day to the Netherlands and parked in the lot of the chic hotel where Maertens first met Adibelli. They cracked open two Jupiler beers in the car. Maertens was already drunk. They had both said cryptic goodbyes to their families.
When they arrived at the Barendrecht offices, Adibelli took Maertens downstairs.
Maertens begged for his life.
“This is really bad—this isn’t who we are—please leave us alone,” he said.
To his surprise, Adibelli agreed. “If you wanted out, why didn’t you let us know?” he said. Maertens was too scared to bring up the beating and the kidnapping and death threats. “Obviously, you know we’re not in a legal business,” Adibelli added. “So if you talk to anyone, we know where you and your family live.”
Adibelli brought Van De Moere down next and asked him if he wanted out, too. Van De Moere said yes.
There was only one condition of the release: Van De Moere had to give Okul an intensive training session on Linux, the operating system on which Metasploit, the hacking software, is based. A few weeks later, according to police and interviews, he did so over one weekend at a Holiday Inn in Ghent. In November, Van De Moere returned two antennas and had a couple of beers with Okul. That was the last either man would see of the Turks.
With the PIN code operation blown, investigators were having an easier time disrupting Becker and Adibelli’s operations. On Nov. 21, 2012, a driver tried to pick up a refrigerated container of mussels at the Antwerp port but didn’t have the right PIN. Instead, he presented a forged purchase order. Customs officers searched the container and found 190 kilograms of cocaine—another case that authorities have linked to Becker and Adibelli, according to police records.
On June 11, 2013, Van De Moere awoke just after dawn to find a dozen cops surrounding his farmhouse. Maertens was on vacation in the south of France with his girlfriend, celebrating a new round of funding for his company. He got a frantic call from his house-sitting brother, who was surrounded by armed officers and a drug-sniffing dog, and immediately returned to Belgium.
At the same time, Dutch police arrived at Adibelli’s home to discover he’d returned to Turkey a few days earlier. In his bedroom, they found a pistol under the mattress and two in the closet. In another bedroom, they found a bag with a machine gun, bullets, and a silencer, and elsewhere a suitcase filled with €1.1 million and a bulletproof vest. At his office, they found signal jammers and documents linking Maertens and Van De Moere to the attacks on DP World, CSAV, and MSC. Adibelli had left in a hurry, ahead of his family. Authorities believe he may have been tipped off.
Okul left for Turkey, too. He recently posted a Facebook picture of himself on a jet ski.
The Dutch portion of the case is expected to go to trial in November and involve at least 22 people, including Becker, who authorities say has been charged with drug-trafficking offenses as the alleged leader of the smuggling ring. Becker’s lawyer didn’t return calls. Adibelli has been charged in absentia with organized crime and drug offenses. His lawyer, Pol Vandemeulebroucke, says his client denies all blame. Belgian prosecutors handling the hacking case declined to comment on their plans for Adibelli and Okul, who are both formally suspects there. Okul, who now operates a spy shop in Turkey, didn’t respond to requests for comment through the shop and via Facebook. His lawyer, Alper Cinar, declined to comment. In the Netherlands and Belgium, targets of an investigation are considered under suspicion until the investigation is formally closed and the case moves to the trial stage.
That leaves Van De Moere and Maertens. The Belgian case, code-named Ocean’s 13, has them being investigated on suspicion of hacking into the Antwerp offices of DP World, CSAV, and MSC. Maertens and Van De Moere were adamant in police interrogations that they were unwilling accomplices, forced to hack under threat of violence. They insist their sabotage made the pwnies useless and that if Okul stole PIN codes they must have come from his phishing e-mails. Van De Moere says that when he parked at DP World, he intentionally was far enough away that he couldn’t get a good signal.
Authorities say Maertens and Van De Moere played a more central role. Police found evidence that when Maertens and Adibelli visited the Antwerp high-rise in November 2011 to scout out offices for Argus Labs, the offices they visited were above and below CSAV, where a pwnie was later discovered.
In February 2013, months after Van De Moere and Maertens say they last saw the mobsters, CSAV, DP World, MSC, and another port operator called PSA Antwerp were targeted by a new round of malware-laden e-mails. The messages were sent from a cellular tower in Wuustwezel, near a location where Maertens kept a computer server, according to police records. Asked about the e-mails during his initial interrogation, Maertens said he couldn’t explain it, but he wasn’t involved.
What the police don’t have is much of a money trail, adding credence to the hackers’ claim that they were coerced. Even though Maertens and Van De Moere were cast in the local press as major figures responsible for the smuggling of hundreds of millions of euros in illicit drugs, police later released seized assets related to Maertens’s company after they were unable to link them to the caper.
In June, as he awaited trial, Van De Moere sent Bloomberg Businessweek an e-mail looking back at his ordeal. “Towards Filip, I’m not the type of guy which easily gets angry,” he wrote in English. “Of course we’ve went over and over how Filip could or couldn’t have seen/figured out these guys were no good, but the conclusion each time was they are masters in manipulation.” Adibelli and Okul had tried the “divide and conquer” trick on them, Van De Moere said. “Our best move to get out of a bad situation was to stick together. We could only get out as a front.”
—With reporting by Elco Van Groningen and Ercan Ersoy


Italy struggles with mountain of seized mafia assets

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By Ljubomir Milasin

Catania (Italy) (AFP) - Italy's battle against the mafia has provoked an unusual problem for the government -- the headache of managing a staggering portfolio of assets and cash seized from mobsters.
Officials control by some estimates about 3,000 companies, 12,000 properties and two billion euros in bank deposits and other assets from organised crime outfits, leaving the government with hundreds of extra employees and properties not seen very favourably by banks.
"In Italy it is more difficult to manage the property seized from the mafia than it is to confiscate it," Michelangelo Patane, a prosecutor in Sicily, said.
Authorities announced a new seizure Wednesday of 1.6 billion euros ($1.75 billion) in alleged mafia property, that included dozens of businesses as well as some 700 houses, villas and buildings.
Seized mafia assets are such an issue in Italy the government created in 2010 a national agency, the ANSBC, to manage the mountain of property in hopes of better handling it.
"We have real estate holdings, companies and other seized mafia assets that have grown more than expected," ANSBC head Umberto Postiglione told AFP.
One of the properties it manages is a sprawling and spectacular beach resort in the Sicilian town of Catania. Its gardens are local historic landmarks and the resort holds some 300 beach huts for tourists, but banks are left nervous by its past as a mafia-owned property.
"The banks slow us down, they don't trust confiscated businesses and if we ask for a loan they refuse to give us one," said Salvatore Piggioli, who works for the company that runs the site.
It is no surprise the government is drowning in mafia assets because it possesses considerable powers to seize them.
Italian law allows authorities to carry out preventative seizures when mafia involvement is suspected, said accountant Giuseppe Giuffrida, an expert in managing seized mafia assets.
He said an official fund for seized assets like bank deposits and stocks currently holds some two billion euros.
Determination of whether the assets are ill-gotten gains can come swiftly. Authorities simply look to see if the values of the property matches up with the owner's publicly declared income.
The assets can also be held while their owner is on trial and are returned in the case of a not guilty verdict.
"I have managed assets temporarily (under government control) as well as those that have been seized," said Giuffrida. "I have never had any problems with the heads of mafia businesses because they know its useless. I have been named by a court and I do my best for the company in question."
The seizure figures are impressive. Over the past six years authorities have seized 1,286 hectares (3,178 acres) of land, which is about a tenth of the size of Catania, prosecutors said.
Over the same period the number of employees in the seized companies has hit 684, making the collection of properties that fourth largest private employer in Sicily.
But taking away assets from the Cosa Nostra in Sicily, the Camorra in Naples and the 'Ndrangheta in Calabria is not without risks.
Two workers from ANSBC who went to seize a house owned by a local mafioso in Naples got a nasty surprise when they tried to open the home's door.
"When they inserted the key handed over by the former owner they were thrown into a wall by a shock of 380 volts," agency head Postiglione said.
"Luckily they weren't trying to kill us," he added.
Once seized, properties can be sold or leased at no cost to towns and associations for new, more honourable uses. One example is the villa that once belonged to Naples crime boss Egidio Coppola and was turned into a museum.
It is also not unusual to spot a flashy Porsche bearing the Red Cross logo at events like the marathon in Rome which also has a label saying "Vehicle confiscated from the Mob."
ANSBC has in its time sold off 33 supermarkets and a shopping centre, while handing over to firefighters 33 trucks that have come under its control.

When it comes to business, "they are liquidated if they are insolvent if they are (financially) healthy we try to run them normally with the final goal being to sell them off," Giuffrida said

FBI: Captain of Genovese Crime Family Sentenced in Manhattan Federal Court

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Preet Bharara, the United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York, announced today that DANIEL PAGANO, a Captain of the Genovese Organized Crime Family of La Cosa Nostra (the “Genovese Crime Family”) was sentenced to a term of 27 months in prison for his leadership role in the Genovese Crime Family. PAGANO pled guilty to participating in a racketeering conspiracy in March 2015 and was sentenced today before by United States District Judge Ronnie Abrams. Manhattan United States Attorney Preet Bharara said: “Danny Pagano, a Captain in the Genovese Crime Family, has been sentenced today for his leadership role in a racketeering conspiracy. Pagano’s conviction and sentence reinforce a simple truth: if you join the mob and choose a life of crime, you end up behind bars.” According to the Indictment and other documents filed in this case, and statements made during the plea and sentencing proceedings: The Genovese Crime Family is part of a nationwide criminal organization known by various names, including the “Mafia” and “La Cosa Nostra” (“LCN”), which operates through entities known as “Families.” The Genovese Crime Family operates through groups of individuals known as “crews” and “regimes,” most of which are based in New York City.
Each “crew” has as its leader a person known as a “Caporegime,” “Capo,” “Captain,” or “Skipper,” who is responsible for supervising the criminal activities of his crew and providing “Soldiers” and associates with support and protection. In return, the Capo typically receives a share of the illegal earnings of each of his crew’s Soldiers and associates, which is sometimes referred to as ?tribute.? DANIEL PAGANO is a Caporegime or Captain in the Genovese Crime Family. Each crew consists of “made” members, sometimes known as “Soldiers,” “wiseguys,” “friends of ours,” and “good fellows.” Soldiers are aided in their criminal endeavors by other trusted individuals, known as “associates,” who sometimes are referred to as “connected” or identified as “with” a Soldier or other member of the Family. Associates participate in the various activities of the crew and its members.
In order for an associate to become a made member of the Family, the associate must first be of Italian descent and typically needed to demonstrate the ability to generate income for the Family and/or the willingness to commit acts of violence. From 2009 through August 2014, PAGANO, along with other members and associates of the Genovese Crime Family, committed a wide array of crimes including operating an illegal gambling business. PAGANO, a Captain, exercised a leadership role within the Family by, among other things, settling disputes between and among associates of the Family. As the Court noted, PAGANO had previously been convicted of racketeering conspiracy and served a term of over eight years in prison.
As a repeat offender, a sentence of incarceration was warranted to deter him from future crimes. * * * In addition to the prison term, Judge Abrams sentenced PAGANO, 61, of Rockland County, to a term of three years of supervised release, and ordered him to pay a fine of $5,000 and forfeiture of $2,000. Mr Bharara thanked the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Rockland County District Attorney’s Office, the Drug Enforcement Administration, United States Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s Homeland Security Investigations, the New York City Police Department, and the New York State Police. The prosecution is being handled by the Office’s Violent and Organized Crime Unit.
Assistant United States Attorneys Jennifer Burns, Rahul Mukhi, and Abigail Kurland are in charge of the prosecution. Follow the FBI’s New York Office on Twitter. Sign up for our e-mail alerts to receive the latest information from the FBI’s New York Office on breaking news, arrests, and fugitives.

Reported by: FBI

Tokyo cops arrest yakuza boss over confinement of construction worker

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By Tokyo Reporter on July 6, 2015

The suspects beat the victim over an 8-hour period inside a Kodo-kai office in Hachioji City
      TOKYO (TR) – Tokyo Metropolitan Police on Monday announced the arrest of the boss of an organized crime group for the alleged confinement and assault of a construction worker, reports the Sankei Shimbun (July 6).
On March 16, Satoshi Endo, the 52-year-old boss of the Nagoya-based Kodo-kai, an affiliate group of the Yamaguchi-gumi, and three other suspects are alleged to have beat the worker, 23, in the head and face over an eight-hour period inside an office of the gang in Hachioji City. Injuries to the victim required one month to heal.
Endo has reportedly denied the allegations, telling police that the accusations are not factual.
According to police, the crimes were committed in an attempt to collect the principle of a 3.2-million-yen loan taken out by the victim.
On Monday morning, investigators raided the Nagoya headquarters of the gang in search of evidence connected to the incident.
  Hachioji, Japan, Kodo-kai, Nagoya, yakuza, Yamaguchi-gumi, 八王子, 名古屋, 山口組, 弘道会




Taxi driver’s tip to stay safe: “The one thing you should say if you run into yakuza”

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Krista Rogers 2 days ago
Rocket News

When one of our Japanese-language reporters stepped into a taxi the other day, the driver suddenly turned to him and asked, “Sir, do you know what you should say if you have a run in with some yakuza?”
Our man was a bit taken aback by the sudden question out of nowhere, but he answered, “Shouldn’t you say you’ll call the police?”
“That’s the usual response, but there’s an even better one,” the driver replied. He then proceeded to share a bit of advice which an actual yakuza whom he had once driven had secretly shared with him.
If you ever find yourself accidentally mixed up with yakuza, here’s what you should say, according to the taxi driver:
“I’d like to speak face-to-face with your boss, so take me to your headquarters.”
Now, under normal circumstances, ordinary folks aren’t usually allowed within the precincts of yakuza offices. If a yakuza grunt were to bring a regular person into the private quarters of their organization, there’s a good chance that he would get a severe punishment from his boss.
We know what you’re thinking–why would a yakuza feel compelled to leave you alone even after a line like that? But hang on, because there’s a Part II to the taxi driver’s story.
Some time after the initial encounter, the same taxi driver happened to give a lift to another yakuza member in Shinjuku. The bill came out to 8,000 yen (US$65.26) at the end of the ride, but the yakuza handed him only 1,000 yen ($8.16). The driver became visibly enraged after that little stunt and used the line that had been taught to him. The yakuza, whose face we imagine must have broken into a wry smile, replied, “Hey mister, you’ve got some balls,” and left 10,000 yen ($81.59) behind.
Upon hearing the rest of the story, our reporter was both impressed at the end result and in awe of someone who would actually have enough guts to use that line.
Would you have been brave enough to use that line if you were in the taxi driver’s position? We sincerely hope that none of our dear readers ever have a run-in with organized crime, but perhaps this line could come in handy under the most dire of circumstances. Seriously though, always stay alert and use your best judgement when such a situation arises–calling the police may still be the safest option.


Kudo-kai boss served with warrant over shooting of ex-cop

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Kyodo
Jul 6, 2015

FUKUOKA – The leader of the Kudo-kai yakuza group was served with an arrest warrant Monday on suspicion of violating two laws over the 2012 shooting of a former police officer.
Satoru Nomura, the 68-year-old head of the Kitakyushu-based criminal syndicate — one of the nation’s biggest — was arrested for the fifth time. His previous arrests were in connection with attacks by the group on three people between 1998 and 2014, including one that involved a murder, and income tax evasion.
This time he is suspected of violating the 1999 law against organized crime and the control of criminal proceeds, as well as the firearms control law.
The police also rearrested 15 Kudo-kai members and arrested two other members.
All of those arrested are suspected of involvement in the attack on the former police officer, who was shot by a gunman in Kitakyushu in April 2012 while walking to a hospital where he worked after retiring from the force. He sustained serious injuries and the case is being treated as an attempted murder.
The former officer, 64, was in charge of investigating the Kudo-kai for more than 30 years until he retired in 2011.
On the same day as the shooting, prosecutors indicted Nomura for evading hundreds of millions of yen in income tax.
The Kudo-kai had some 870 members and quasi-members as of the end of 2014, mostly in Fukuoka Prefecture. Other members are located in Nagasaki, Yamaguchi, Tokyo and Chiba, according to the Fukuoka police.


RECIPES WE WOULD DIE FOR: Polpettine

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