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The purr-fect crime: Mafia attach flaming rags to tails of cats to start forest fires unless protection money is paid

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•           Cats being used as 'arsonists' by the mafia according to a park manager
•           Claims from Giuseppe Antoci of Nebrodi, Sicily's largest national park
•           He says the felines are set alight and sent running through the forests
•           He spoke as firefighters put out hundreds of forest fires on the island
•           Mr Antoci, 48, survived an assassination attempt by the mafia in May
•           It was the first attempt by the mafia to kill a public official in decades

By FRANCIS SCOTT FOR MAILONLINE
PUBLISHED: 06:12 EST, 20 June 2016 | UPDATED: 11:43 EST, 20 June 2016

Cats are being used as 'arsonists' by the mafia who set them alight to start huge forest fires, claims a park manager death-marked by the mob.
President Giuseppe Antoci of Nebrodi, Sicily's largest national park, spoke as firefighters extinguished hundreds of fires which broke out simultaneously across the island last week.
Mr Antoci, 48, who survived an assassination attempt by the mafia in May, claimed the crime group 'use the animals as arsonists', and the cats burn all the bushes that they touch, reportsCorriere Della Sera.
The park director added that five hundred forest fires do not spontaneously combust all at once.
He said: 'One of the mob's arson techniques is to tie a petrol-soaked rag to the tail of a cat and set fire to it. As its tail burns, the cat flees in terror into the undergrowth in the woods, setting fire to everything it touches.
'That makes it harder for investigators to figure out where the fire was started and since the cat is eventually incinerated, they never find what caused the fire,' reports The Times.
Last week the fires ravaged the island and nearly 6,000 hectares of land went up in smoke.
Schools had to be evacuated after a hot sirocco wind blew in from Africa, before forest fires started simultaneously breaking out across the island.
Links with the outbreak to the mafia have been alleged because they are keen on using the scorched woodland, according to Alfredo Morvillo, a Sicilian magistrate who claims the mob has invested in reforestation companies.
The crime syndicate is reportedly furious with park manager Mr Antoci because he tried to stop their practice of syphoning off millions in EU framing subsides from renting out grazing land.
Around 23,000 forestry staff are employed in Sicily, and due to their large number workers have also been suspected of starting fires to make their work appear more essential.
The mayor of Palermo, Leoluca Orlando, blamed the island's forestry workers, after the fires followed the decision by Governor Rosario Crocetta to sack 180 of them this year after they were found to have convictions for mafia crimes or arson attacks.
Mr Antoci survived an ambush by the Cosa Nostra in May when they blocked his car with boulders before spraying bullets at the vehicle.
The assassination attempt failed thanks to the interventions of bodyguards who defended Mr Antoci from gunfire and two Molotov cocktails, reports news site Famiglia Cristiana.
Mr Antoci said: 'When agents opened my door, I thought it was the assailants, I was convinced it was over and expecting the coup de grace.
'Imagine, then, my sigh of relief and my joy when I realized that it was the policemen and (assistant chief) Manganaro.'
It was the first attempt by the mafia to kill a public official in decades.



Italian mafia boss nabbed in mountain hideout after two decades on the run

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 By Tess Owen
June 26, 2016 |

Italy's second-most wanted fugitive, mafia boss Ernesto Fazzalari, was captured on Sunday after two decades on the run.
Police nabbed Fazzalari, a leader of the powerful 'Ndrangheta organization, as he slept in a hideaway in the mountainous Calabria region in Italy's south.
He "went from his sleep to the handcuffs of the Carabinieri paramilitary police," Colonel Lorenzo Falferi told reporters, according to the Associated Press.
Fazzalari had been on the lam since 1996. He was convicted in absentia in 1996 of extortion, membership of a mafia-like organization, attempted murder and a double homicide. He now faces life in prison.
Italian prosecutor Federico Cafiero De Raho described Fazzalari as a "merciless killer" and a central actor in a bloody six-year turf war between rival 'Ndrangheta clans that left more than 600 people dead from 1985 to 1991 in Calabria. De Raho recalled one particular grisly episode that involved a victim's severed head being thrown into the air and shot as a target.
Italy's Interior Minister Angelino Alfano described Fazzalari as "one of the most important fugitives and a leading underworld figure," according to AFP.
Fazzalari's notorious 'Ndrangheta syndicate is based in Calabria in the "toe" of Italy's boot, but the group's reach stretches throughout the country, across Europe, and into South America, where it has deep roots in cocaine trade. Europol has ranked the 'Ndrangheta among the world's wealthiest and most powerful organized crime groups. In 2014, Pope Francis condemned the 'Ndrangheta as "the adoration of evil and contempt of the common good."
Authorities told reporters that Fazzalari was sleeping alongside a 41-year-old woman when he was arrested. Next to him was a pistol and two loaded magazines. The woman was taken into custody and is under investigation for weapons possession, according to AP.
Authorities also said that Fazzalari was able to elude capture for 20 years thanks to an entrenched "code of silence" and the complicity of local citizens. The 'Ndrangheta also has a history of successfully infiltrating local governments.
In 2004, the Carabinieri discovered Fazzalari's previous hideout: an underground bunker beneath a farmhouse in Taurianova, his hometown, with a tunnel that led to the woods.
Fazzalari was nowhere to be found, but two of his cohorts were arrested. The lair was equipped with air-conditioning system, internet, and television, and stocked with fine wines, bottles of Dom Perignon champagne and Cuban cigars, leading Italian media to describe it as Fazzalari's "five-star bunker." In 2012, the entire local council of Reggio Calabria was sacked on suspicion of having ties to the 'Ndrangheta. De Raho said that Fazzalari and his allies "controlled every clod of dirt."
"He was feeling protected in his territory, by his people," said De Raho.
Italy's most-wanted fugitive is Matteo Messina Denaro, chieftain of the Sicilian Cosa Nostra.
'Our feuding gangs could end up like cartel thugs shooting up restaurants' - retired leading Garda Tony Hickey
Paul Williams
The decorated garda who targeted John Gilligan and his murderous gang believes no group is untouchable and that “the time will come” for the country’s organised crime gangs.
Retired Assistant Garda Commissioner Tony Hickey, who was the Chief Superintendent in charge of investigating the murder of Sunday Independent journalist Veronica Guerin, also raised concerns over the disregard being shown for innocent people by contemporary criminals.
“I’m no expert and have no inside track but what I hear through the grapevine is that some of the Hutches were involved with the Kinahans at the highest level and for whatever reason there was a hit placed on one Hutch member, there was a meeting, money exchanged hands and it was like something out of The Sopranos.
“I was at a seminar in the States a number of years ago with the Drug Enforcement Agency (DEA) and the FBI. They talked about how the Mafia would go into a bar and shoot a man in the head and leave.
“But then Colombians arrived to Florida to distribute cocaine. They would go into a bar and shoot up the entire place. That’s the difference and maybe that’s the direction we’re heading? I don’t know.”
The former senior garda also discussed the dynamics of an organised crime outfit, and how internal paranoia can often lead to its downfall.
“There is so much paranoia involved, there is no honour among thieves and the gangs don’t trust each other deep down. They have to stay close to the action to make sure they don’t get ripped off.
“Gilligan himself was caught with money in Heathrow, because his bagman was arrested in Lucan.
“(Martin) Cahill was lucky, on a number of occasions several units were close to catching him, but he got shot.
“The same applies to the gangs right to the present day, their time will come as well and somebody else will take over,” he said.
Tony Hickey also discussed the investigation into the murder of heroic journalist Veronica Guerin – and how the lack of interaction with various national agencies made it difficult to target Gilligan and his gang prior to the killing.

            

The Mafia Is Alive, Well, and Controlling Bread Prices in Italy

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BY WYATT MARSHALL

Thanks to movies like The Godfather cementing the image of tuxedoed mobsters hanging out in cigar rooms in our collective memory, the Mafia can oftentimes feel like a thing of the past. But over in Italy, they’re still a big deal. Some estimates say the mob accounts for up to 7 percent of the country’s GDP. And among their nefarious activities these days, contributing to the billions of dollars in the mob’s coffers? Jacking up the price of bread on the unsuspecting public.
Italian police recently arrested 24 people believed to have ties to the Mafia for fixing the price of bread in northern neighborhoods of Naples to high above market rate. The police allege that bread retailers of all sizes, whether a street vendor or a supermarket, have had to buy their bread from bakeries tied to the Camorra Mafia for years, or otherwise deal with some of the mob’s famous extracurriculars, according to The Local.
“Only a few dared not to” buy bread from the mob, said Giuseppe Furciniti, the commander of Naples’ organized crime unit. Those who sourced their baked goods elsewhere could see their shops burned or would be otherwise punished.
This isn’t the first time members of the Camorra family in Naples have been arrested for carb-related reasons. A couple months back, a Camorra boss got busted by cops posing as pizza delivery boys when he ordered a pie to his house while watching a soccer game. It’s hard for mobsters to resist the dough (pun intended).
This time the takedown wasn’t as Hollywood-ready. The arrests—which come with charges of Mafia association, drug trafficking, racketeering, weapons possession, and murder, to name a few—were performed after evidence was collected through surveillance and wiretaps.
Just a few days earlier, a ‘Ndrangheta boss, Ernesto Fazzalari, was caught after 20 years on the lam in Calabria, the ‘Ndrangheta’s home turf. The ‘Ndrangheta are the biggest of Italy’s three top organized crime families, which also include the Camorra in Naples and the Cosa Nostra in Sicily. In 2014, the ‘Ndrangheta made more money than McDonald’s and Deutsche Bank combined, according to a study.




Mafia Hit Suspected in Murder of Beloved Brooklyn Pizzeria Owner

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by Nancy Dunham

Louis Barbati, owner of Spumoni Gardens, was found murdered at his home with $10,000 cash on him. The Gardens was also tied to a double murder involving a stolen sauce recipe.
The mafia is suspected in the death of the owner of a Brooklyn pizzeria that was once a key site in a mob war.
Louis Barbati, 61, was in his Dyker Heights backyard at about 7 PM Thursday evening when a man described as in his 30s and wearing a hoodie fatally shot him five times, according to the New York Daily News. Barbati had $10,000 cash on him at the time of the shooting, which was not taken, the Daily News reported.
Barbati was the owner of L&B Spumoni Gardens, which was founded by his Italian immigrant grandfather in 1939. Fans of its famed Sicilian pizza and ices often put it on New York's "Best of" lists, reported The Post.
A recording on the restaurant's voice mail said no one was available to answer telephone calls.
Spumoni Garden's has seen it's share of mob activity. The New York Daily Newsreported in that in 2012,
Frank Guerra, a reputed Columbo crime family associate whose ex-wife was a part owner of the pizzeria, was acquitted of a double murder of former underboss Joseph Scopo and Staten Island club owner Michael Devine, as well as extortion of a former Spumoni employee — who he accused of lifting L&B's secret sauce recipe. Guerra is currently serving time for dealing Oxycontin.
Many people think of the mafia as something that was eradicated thanks to intense law enforcement efforts including the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) of 1970. But according to James Wedick, an FBI expert and 34-year veteran of the bureau, the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001 gave the mafia a chance to regroup and build in the United States. " For almost 10 years, there wasn't a lot [of focus on] the mafia. What you saw were career agents and investigators migrated out of organized crime to fight terrorism."
There's been a small shift back to policing organized crime in recent years. In 2011, an FBI-led investigation resulted in the arrests of more than 100 organized crime figures.
"That showed that the Bureau and other law enforcement agencies are back on it, bringing the resources back into [fighting organized crime]," said Wedick of that and other high-profile crackdowns. "It was a way for the Department of Justice to say 'We haven't forgotten you guys.'"
There are still five major crime families in New York and many have familial ties back to key figures from decades past, though their cash flows have changed. In past years the mafia made money through distribution of narcotics, prostitution and similar crimes. Today's mafia members operate bogus health clinics and other illegal businesses.
"The crime families are still problematic. They are dangerous. They kill people. They threaten people," he said. "As long as there is gold on this planet they fill find a way to take it."



Montreal's Bloody Mafia War Won't End

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By Adam Kovac
June 2, 2016 | 2:20 pm
Until police found Rocco Sollecito's corpse in his bullet-riddled luxury SUV a few hundred meters from police headquarters in Laval, just north of Montreal, he was likely the highest-ranking mafioso still standing in Canada. But the grisly discovery on May 28 was just the latest in a string of gangland slayings in the city, where the Italian mafia has struggled to fill a power vacuum caused by years of internal struggle and police busts.
A once-unified network of Italian mobsters, street gangs, bikers, and corrupt city officials has decayed and crumbled in the last decade. Violence has flared as a result, and the stack of bodies is growing higher.
It's a historic low point for the Montreal mafia, long considered by authorities to be the strongest organized crime group in Canada.
It's unclear exactly which organization is behind the current spate of violence, but, as one mafia expert told VICE News: "That group, whoever it is, appears to be much stronger."
Leadership Woes
On the wiretap recording, Francesco del Balso's voice is calm.
"I want my fucking money today or Lorenzo said he's gonna grab you, he's gonna fucking turn you into a pretzel. And don't fuck with him, bro.
"Listen to me, go get 112 dimes and save yourself a beating of your life."
This is how the Montreal mafia's version of a collections agency works.
At the time of the recording, Del Balso was a notorious bookmaker and high-ranking member of Montreal's infamous Rizzuto crime family. The Lorenzo on the tape was presumably Lorenzo Giordano, a close associate of Del Balso and the capo considered to be the de facto leader of the family for a time.
The Rizzuto family is an organization so powerful during the rule of former leader Vito Rizzuto that it often drew comparisons to the fabled "Five Families" that controlled New York during the city's mafia heyday. The FBI still considers the Rizzuto syndicate to be a wing of the New York-based Bonanno crime family.
The Rizzutos have been the only game in town for years. But now, experts say, the family is weak and awaiting a strongman to either take it over or replace it by force. The dons of the family have had a hard time staying alive.
One of the biggest blows to the organization was Operation Colisée, a 2006 law enforcement operation that spanned three years and resulted in the arrests of Del Balso, Giordano, Sollecito, and a host of other Rizzuto allies. Convictions for drug trafficking, extortion, and bookmaking put them behind bars.
The mobsters were eventually released from prison, and, one by one, they each wound up dead. Sollecito is just the most recent. The killings started not long after Rizzuto's confession in 2007 that he was involved in the murder of three rival mobsters. Vito died of natural causes in 2013, making him one of the few in the family to die peacefully.
 In December 2009, gunmen killed Vito's son Nicolo Rizzuto, Jr. in broad daylight on a sidewalk in Montreal's west end. The following year, a sniper perched in a tree shot and kill his grandfather, Nick Sr., while he sat at his kitchen table.
Next was Paolo Renda, brother-in-law to Vito and once believed to be his most trusted consigliere. He mysteriously disappeared in 2010, while the organization was trying to figure out new leadership. His wife found his car with the windows rolled down and the keys in the ignition, but no sign of her husband.
Police figure that the one trying to broker the new leadership for the family was Salvatore "The Iron Worker" Montagna, a one-time leader of the New York-based Bonanno family, who was deported back to Montreal in 2009.
In 2011, he was gunned down in a residential neighborhood on Montreal's north shore — but his would-be assassins were sloppy. He survived and jumped into the freezing Assomption River, washing up a few minutes later on a small island, where police found him bleeding to death in the snow.
Seven men ultimately pled guilty to conspiring to kill Montagna. One of them, Raynald Desjardins, was a right-hand man to Rizzuto and the target for more than one murder plot.
In March 2016, months after Giordano's release from prison to a halfway house, police in Laval responded to a report of gunshots outside a gym near the highway. They found him sitting in his car, sporting multiple fresh bullet holes.
The murders have even spread internationally. Two Canadian mobsters were whacked in a 2013 ambush in Sicily, apparently on orders from Montreal.
Virtually the only high-ranking figures in the organization who aren't dead are in jail.
Police figure, most recently, leadership of the family was split between Sollecito's son, Stefano, and Montreal lawyer Leonardo Rizzuto, Vito's second son. Canadian authorities arrested both men late last year.
Chaos
For years, the three disparate wings of the organized crime world had been largely at peace. That was one of Vito Rizzuto legacies. Despite some opposition, he struck a deal between the bikers and the street gangs around one of the largest sources of income for Montreal's criminal underworld: selling cocaine. The agreement kept the peace, and made everyone money. The bikers moved product, and the street gangs sold it. The mafia managed the whole operation.
"The Rizzuto crime family was involved in the importation level, the Hells Angels working on the distribution level, the street gangs on the selling level," said Antonio Nicaso, author of several books on Canada's Cosa Nostra. "Everyone was happy with that."
But with Vito gone, things fell apart.
"In the Montreal mafia, the leader needs to be someone who can build trust between different clans, who has influence like Vito Rizzuto had, who can be a negotiator. Lorenzo Giordano did not have these qualities," said Pierre de Champlain, a former Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) analyst and author who has written extensively on Montreal organized crime.
Nicaso agreed. He said that Giordano was more of a blunt instrument: "[He was one of the people] on the streets, dealing with the violent aspects of the organization."
Under Giordano's weak leadership, and during the periods of uncertainty that preceded and followed his reign, internal factions formed and battled for higher footholds in the mafia hierarchy, racking up a significant death toll in the process. While the mafia tried to keep its own house in order, the other wings of the enterprise fell to infighting.
Chenier Dupuy, the head of the Bo-Gars street gang, was killed in a mall parking lot in 2012, reportedly because he had fought back against attempts by the Hells Angels to centralize some drug running. His lieutenant was killed a few hours later. Ducarme Joseph, the reputed leader of the city's 67s gang, one-time rivals of the Bo-Gars, was shot dead in the street in 2014.
Maurice "Mom" Boucher, meanwhile, was recently charged with plotting a murder from within his jail cell. Boucher, a Hells Angels boss in Quebec, has been in prison for the past decade on two first-degree murder convictions.
Police allege that Boucher, his daughter, and his former right-hand man all conspired to whack Raynald Desjardins — the one who pled guilty to plotting the murder of "The Iron Worker."
The operations that netted Boucher were the same that scooped up Leonardo Rizzuto and Stefano Sollecito, as well as Gregory Wooley, a Hells Angels member whoreportedly unified the north-end gangs — a move that Dupuy and Sévère Paul reportedly opposed.
On the other end of the business, a provincial inquiry linked the Rizzutos to an intricate, and lucrative, bid-rigging scheme in the province's construction industry. Repeated corruption investigations, culminating in a province-wide inquiry into the industry, brought down two successive Montreal mayors and implicated a host of provincial and municipal politicians, engineering firms, and bureaucrats. Investigators found that the industry and city government colluded to inflate the price of public construction and engineering work in exchange for political contributions. Mafia-linked figures kept the whole thing running smoothly and punished anyone who tried to break from the system.
 Losing that scheme was definitely bad for business. When business is bad, things tend to go south.
Since 2009, there have been roughly 25 mafia-linked murders in Montreal, according to a report by Le Journal de Montréal. While that might be a small figure in American terms, it represents a significant chunk of the homicides in the city, which sees, on average, just 45 homicides a year.
In 2012 alone, organized crime were responsible for 18 of the city's 35 homicides, according to the city's police department.
'Someone Always Takes Over'
It remains unclear who exactly is poised to wind up on top of the Rizzuto family.
"They constantly replace themselves," said Marcel Danis, a professor who teaches a course on organized crime at Concordia University who also works as a criminal defense attorney, and has represented members of various crime factions. "They're quite strong and we can see by the most recent police arrests, there's still an alliance between the Hells [Angels] and the mafia."
Those positions rarely stay vacant for long and the competition can be fierce.
"I think what we're seeing is the gradual elimination of what was left of the Rizzuto family and obviously an attempt by some group to take over," said Danis. "That group, whoever it is, appears to be much stronger."
"The Rizzuto crime family is facing a challenge," added Nicaso. "There are people in the organization probably trying to make a move. There are other organizations trying to muscle in and to position them in a different criminal landscape."
But now, with increased scrutiny from authorities and higher-ups like Giordano being released from prison, more players are competing for a smaller pie.
"There are people coming out of jail and there are people outside of jail," said Nicaso. "The people outside of jail won't allow the people coming from jail to lead the organization."
But ambition and drug money might not be the only motivations in the violent internal strife. Another, simpler, motive may be a factor in some of these killings: revenge.
According to Danis, the single sniper shot that took out Nick Rizzuto Sr. in his home indicates that the powerful Calabrian mafia, the 'Ndrangheta — pushed out of Montreal in the '80s in a violent turf war — was looking to make a comeback. Rizzuto's death, at home in front of his wife, closely resembles how the Rizzutos took out a Calabrian figure during their rise to prominence, Danis said.
"There's a parallel there," the organized crime expert said. "And whoever shot Rizzuto was a professional killer. The gun was in the woods in the back of the house. He'd have to be a super shot to do that. When you look at who might have killed him, you come to the conclusion it was not a street gang, it was not the Hells [Angels]."
The deaths of Montagna, the Rizzutos, and many others connected to the organized crime scene in Montreal point to one thing: A proper, old-fashioned mob war. But all wars have an end. And when this one does, the most likely outcome is that the biggest mafia in Canada will have a new top boss.
"Somebody always takes over," said Danis. "Always."


Presumed mobster Angelo D’Onofrio killed in Ahunstic-Cartierville

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 By Rachel LauWeb Producer  Global News
WATCH ABOVE: Presumed mobster Angelo D'Onofrio was gunned down in front of Café Sinatra. Billy Shields has the details.
MONTREAL – Presumed mobster Angelo D’Onofrio was shot and killed Thursday afternoon at a café in Ahuntsic-Cartierville.
It happened around 4 p.m. when the 72-year-old was sitting at Café Sinatra on Fleury Street.
Police said he was shot several times at close range.
D’Onofrio was taken to hospital, where he later died.
He was allegedly a long-standing member of the mafia, but had recently retired.
“If you look back into his record, you’re going to find out that he was involved with organized crime a few years back,” said Antony Donato, an organized crime expert.
READ MORE: Presumed head of Montreal mafia, Rocco Sollecito, killed in Laval
Witnesses told police the suspect was a young black male.
“A black man with some dreads. Long dreads,” confirmed Andrée-Anne Picard with Montreal police.
The shooting came just one day before the funeral of alleged mafia-head Rocco Sollecito, who was killed last Friday.
“There is presently no leadership that comes from within,” said Donato.
“Rocco Sollecito, he was acting Godfather. So right now, something is going on from the inside.”
© 2016 Global News, a division of Corus Entertainment Inc.

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Antonio Fusco, victim of shooting outside Hall of Fame, released on $500 bail on drug charges, pleads not guilty

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SPRINGFIELD - Longmeadow resident Antonio Fusco, 21, pleaded not guilty to distribution of marijuana in Springfield District Court on June 7, after being shot in the parking lot of the Hall of Fame on May 17, according to police.
 By Stephanie Barry | sbarry@repub.com
Antonio Fusco, 21, of Longmeadow, son of mob soldier Emilio Fusco, was charged with possession with intent to distrbute marijuana by Springfield Police. The arrest occurred three weeks after Antonio Fusco was shot in the shoulder by a man he intended to sell drugs, a witness told police.
SPRINGFIELD - Antonio Fusco, a 21-year-old Longmeadow resident police say was shot in the Hall of Fame parking lot on May 17 in the midst of a drug deal, was released on $500 bail in Springfield District Court on Wednesday afternoon.
Fusco, the son of Genovese crime family soldier Emilio Fusco, pleaded not guilty to distribution of marijuana. He was arrested at his home Tuesday morning and appeared in court shackled and with his arm in a sling.
A witness told police Antonio Fusco was shot in the shoulder after he began arguing with a prospective buyer in Fusco's car. The "buyer" stuck a gun to a female witness' head and Fusco whacked him with an expandable baton, police records state.
A police department spokesman said the witness account sounded like a hold-up, as opposed to an actual transaction. Police recovered nearly three pounds of marijuana from a backpack in Fusco's car, according to court records.

A pretrial conference was set for July 28.

Jailed Mafia Don’s Son: Hillary Clinton Told Me She Would ‘Do Something’ To Racketeering Law

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by PATRICK HOWLEY
Giovanni Gambino, the son of a notorious Mafia leader, tells Breitbart News that Hillary Clinton told him in a private meeting that she was going to help change the RICO laws in the United States.
Clinton faces an ongoing FBI investigation into her potential violations of the Espionage Act by her use of a private email server and potential public corruption relating to the Clinton Foundation. An anonymously sourced and later-deleted Huffington Post articlerecently claimed that the FBI will recommend indicting Clinton under the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO). Prosecutors often use to prosecute Mafia leaders and associates.
But Clinton has been open to changing the RICO law for almost a decade, Gambino said.
In 2007, Giovanni Gambino’s father, Francesco “Ciccio” Gambino, who had been sentenced to 30 years in prison back in the 1980’s, told him to seek out and meet with Clinton. He wanted the meeting because “he thought she’s got so much power, they [the Clintons] could maybe do something” to release him from jail, Gambino told Breitbart News.
Gambino has become a popular mass-market crime writer. His latest book, “The Vindicators,” is about the historical origins of the Mafia, and is coming out in July.
His father was reportedly a boss in the Gambino crime family, which was one of New York City’s famous “Five Families” that started going down after it become involved in the drug trade. Ciccio Gambino was once identified by law enforcement as the godfather of the Sicilian mafia in the United States.
The proud son knew that his father needed help, and he was determined to carry out the “mission” that his old man gave him.
Giovanni Gambino showed up to the Charleston Place hotel in South Carolina weeks after his father told him to get in touch with Clinton. The presidential candidate, joined by a female aide, met with Gambino while Secret Service guards stood outside the hotel. Gambino said “we spoke for a while” and called Clinton a “very good listener.”
“I told them about my father and how unfair the RICO law was to so many people,” Gambino recalled. “I told her I had a way of getting more votes for her. There are millions of inmates out there who have relatives. Those are organic votes. Instead of getting favors from the corporations and trying to get the employees of a corporation to vote for her, these are organic votes. They go out to vote for their loved ones.”
“She showed emotions. She showed some pulse that she was going to do something about it. I think she means well for people,” Gambino said, though he added that he’s skeptical of all politicians.
Gambino confirmed that Clinton expressed willingness to look into the issue of changing the RICO law.
“‘Of course,’ she told me,” Gambino said. “Once she settled down and once she accomplished what she wants to do she would do something about it.”
“And she was going to do something about over-populated prisons because there are a lot of non-violent offenders. She said she was going to do something about it.”
“She promised me that she was going to look into it, and she told me she knew the over-populated prisons were a big problem,” he said. “She knew it was a big problem.”
Clinton, of course, lost the 2008 primary to Barack Obama, and Gambino’s father died before any changes to the RICO law could have sprung him from the joint.
But President Obama and his appointees are now releasing tens of thousands of criminals from jail, and are pushing a bill in Congress that would release many thousands more, amid rising public concern about the rising crime rate.
Gambino said that he is somewhat sympathetic to Clinton’s current presidential campaign but ultimately “she has a connection with the government … That’s the biggest organized crime operation out there.”
“They [the Clintons] got to stay away from the corporations,” he said. “As long as the big corporations are funding her it’s going to be trouble. She has to help the middle class and the lower class.”
Gambino also is sympathetic to fellow New Yorker Donald Trump.
“I think Donald Trump will be great for the military,” Gambino said. “He will be a great leader in that aspect. A lot of leaders around the world respect him because they know he’s a great businessman and he’s got a great personality.”



Queens residents in Genovese crime family charged with racketeering

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Five residents from Whitestone, Bayside and Oakland Gardens are among 18 individuals from the Genovese organized crime family charged with racketeering, according to U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara.
By Madina Toure

Three Whitestone residents, one Bayside resident and one Oakland Gardens resident are among 18 individuals from the Genovese organized crime family who have been indicted on racketeering offenses, including conspiracy to commit murder and illegal gambling, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara announced last week.
Of the 18 defendants charged, 17 are in custody, including 13 defendants who were arrested May 13 as part of a collaborative effort by the FBI, NYPD and Nassau County Police Department, according to Bharara.
The 17 defendants in custody—who hail from Queens, Staten Island, the Bronx, Brooklyn and Long Island—were scheduled to be appear May 13 before U.S. Magistrate Judge Ronald Ellis in Manhattan federal court, Bharara said.
“With today’s charges, we strike an important blow against the Genovese crime family,” he said. “Whether you are an old school made member of the mob or a young street criminal looking to join it, the message today is clear: The life of a mobster is a dead-end street that ends nowhere good.”
Robert Debello, 74, of Whitestone, known as “Old Man,” “Bobby” and “Grandpa”; Steven Pastore, 56, of Staten Island; Ryan Ellis, 34, of Bayside, known as “Joseph Princi,” “Baldy,” “Lazy Eye” and “Zeus”; and Salvatore Delligatti, 40, of Oakland Gardens, known as “Jay” and “Fat Sal,” were members or associates of the organized crime family, according to the indictment.
Debello was a soldier, reporting directly to a captain in the Genovese family, often at a social club in Lower Manhattan, the indictment said.
From about 2008 to around May 2016, Debello, Pastore, Ellis and Delligatti took part in the criminal affairs of the Genovese family through a pattern of racketeering activity, the indictment continued.
Debello, Ellis and Delligatti conspired to commit a murder in 2014, an attempted murder, extortion and participate in an illegal gambling business as well as carrying out firearm offenses, the court documents said.
Pastore was also involved in the operation of an illegal gambling business, the indictment said.
Five of the other defendants, including Luigi Romano, 38, of Whitestone, known as “Louie Sunoco,” conspired along with Delligatti, one of the Genovese family associates, to commit a murder for hire and committed a related firearms offense, the indictment continued.
The remaining nine defendants were involved in the operation of the illegal gambling business, the indictment added.

Reach reporter Madina Toure by e-mail at mtoure@cnglocal.com or by phone at (718) 260–4566.

REPUTED GENOVESE CAPO SENTENCED TO ALMOST 22 YEARS FOR MAFIA CRIMES - Press of Atlantic City: Crime

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Editor's note: This story originally ran November 17, 1993.
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A reputed captain of a Genovese crime family was sentenced Tuesday to nearly 22 years in prison for racketeering, extortion and illegal gambling.
Salvatore "Sally Dogs" Lombardi, who authorities contend oversaw much of the family's New Jersey operations, plans to appeal the sentence, his lawyer said.
"Organized crime has widespread societal implications, and it affects many people," said U.S. District Judge Maryanne Trump Barry. "Mr. Lombardi was ... a substantial player in the largest crime family in the country."
Barry sentenced Lombardi, 54, to 21 years and 10 months in prison, 3 years supervised release, and $175,000 in fines. It was the maximum permitted under federal sentencing guidelines.
Lombardi and seven other reputed Genovese members were convicted in May of racketeering but acquitted of other serious charges, including murder and kidnapping. A federal jury had deliberated 10 days before returning the split verdicts in the 14-week-long trial.

© 2016 Press of Atlantic City. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Judge: State's evidence against mob defendant 'Skinny' Santoro the strongest

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  By Mira Wassef | mwassef@siadvance.com
MANHATTAN, N.Y. -- After hearing the state's case during the nearly three-month Bonanno mob trial, Supreme Court Justice Mark Dwyer said the evidence against a reputed Staten Island mobster was "by far the strongest."
Based on his decision, Dwyer on Wednesday set bail for Anthony (Skinny) Santoro at $250,000 cash and $500,000 bond. The Great Kills native is accused of being a soldier in the Bonanno crime family, the prosecution alleges.
Dwyer also ordered that bail figure for defendants Vito Badamo, 53; and Ernest Aiello, 36. Bail for defendant Nicholas Santora, 73, the alleged ringleader, was set at $500,000 cash and $1 million bond.
"The evidence of all four of them in a criminal organization is very strong," Dwyer said before setting bail amounts. "The evidence of criminal activity is very telling for all four."
The defendants are accused of enterprise corruption, including loansharking, gambling and drug dealing, after authorities reportedly busted the family's nine-man crew in July 2013.

They have been incarcerated for nearly three years, and the bail application came a day after the judge ordered a mistrial due to juror dissonance.

Juror dissension as mistrial is declared in mob case

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Juror says the rest of the panel was not considering his opinion, and was only worried about getting a guilty verdict.
Santoro's lawyer, Adam Konta, had asked the court for reasonable bail between $10,000 to $25,000, and argued the defendants had spent enough time in prison for a non-violent crime and were not flight risks.
"They should've never been remanded to begin with," Konta said during the proceeding in state Supreme Court in Manhattan. "There were no victims in this case.
"The only islands they're running to is Staten and Long."
Assistant District Attorney Gary Galperin, who told the court he intends to retry the case, had recommended the defendants remain remanded before outlining his case for each alleged mobster.
As for Santoro, Galperin referred to the stocky Staten Island man as a "schemer" and "hustler."
Prosecutors say Santoro was a key player in the Bonanno family's gambling operation, allegedly setting the prices for drugs and deciding on opening and freezing gambling accounts.
The bulk of the state's case against him is the information intercepted from a series of wiretap calls, which implicate him using mob slang referring to illegal drug and gambling activities.
"He was more than any other defendants involved in every single scheme," the prosecutor said.
Galperin also argued Santoro had been disrespectful to the court and the process. In jailhouse calls, the ADA said, Santoro referred to a judge as a "f----- b----" and said he would like to see the prosecutor set on fire and burn to death.
Santoro got a chuckle during the remarks, but Galperin didn't find it amusing.
"That doesn't give this prosecutor a warm and fuzzy feeling," he said.
The prosecutor also detailed some of the defendants' criminal history, including Santoro's 2013 guilty plea in a federal gambling case in Connecticut.
Dwyer asked the state to provide a letter detailing the defendants connection to the charges, particularly gambling and loansharking. The quartet is charged with enterprise corruption, grand larceny in the second-degree and first-degree criminal usury.

The parties will reconvene at the end of June to work out a new trial date.

The Strange Saga of the 'Odd Father,' the Mob Boss Who Faked Mental Illness

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 By Seth Ferranti
Vincent "Chin" Gigante ran New York's Genovese crime family for nearly a quarter-century. After assuming power in the early 1980s, the Chin raked in some $100 million calling the shots for upwards of 300 made men operating in New York's Little Italy, on the Miami docks and in the streets of Philadelphia. Loyal soldiers apparently referred to him by rubbing their chins after Gigante issued an edict that his name not be uttered in public.
Throughout his reign, Gigante was at the helm of one of the most powerful mafia organizations in the United States. The former professional boxer, who made his bones in the crime world as a ruthless contract killer, was known for enforcing mob code by, well, killing guys who violated it. The Chin was even said to put a contract out on John Gotti after the latter had Big Paul Castellano, boss of the Gambino family, whacked without getting his OK first.
Despite the fearsome reputation, though, the Chin was probably best known as the Odd Father because he feigned insanity at key junctures, puzzling doctors, frustrating law enforcement officials, and prolonging his reign. It might be hard to envision now, but the crime boss routinely gallivanted around Greenwich Village, Manhattan, in a bathrobe, slippers and floppy hat pulled down low on his head. He was known to urinate in public, play pinochle in storefronts, and even hid a second family from his wife.
A 30-year run of psychiatric evaluations finally came to an end when the Chin was declared competent to stand trial in 1997. He was convicted of racketeering and murder conspiracy, and sentenced to federal prison, where he died in 2005. Later this month, veteran New York crime reporter Larry McShane is coming out with a definitive history of the mafioso, Chin: The Life and Crimes of Mafia Boss Vincent Gigante. The seasonedDaily News writer, who covered the aftermath of the 1985 hit on Castellano, goes deep on the life and misadventures of one of the quirker mob bosses in US history.
Ahead of the book's release on May 31, we spoke to McShane about this uniquely American true crime character.
Vincent Gigante after being accused of shooting Frank Costello in 1958. Photo by Art Whittaker courtesy NY Daily News via Kensington Books
VICE: Walk us through how Gigante became head of the Genovese Crime Family in the first place.
Larry McShane: The Chin was the son of Italian immigrants who settled in Greenwich Village during the great wave of immigration of the 1920s. He became a professional boxer, a mob-dominated sport at the time, and gravitated toward his neighborhood's wise guys—most importantly, future bosses Vito Genovese and Tommy Eboli. Don Vito became the head of the family that would bear his surname, and the Chin followed him to the top of the Mafia hierarchy.
An FBI memo described Gigante as "an efficient hit man" for Genovese, although his most famous foray into mob murder was the botched May 1957 hit on mob boss Frank Costello. Chin missed a shot from point-blank range, but the shooting boosted his mob profile and helped convince Costello to step down. Genovese replaced Costello, bringing Chin to the big leagues.
Who were the guys that he came up under in the mob?
Vito Genovese was his mentor, but he was also schooled by guys like Fat Tony Salerno and a terrifying mob enforcer named Gaetano (Corky) Vastola. Chin was also a pal of the legendarily mobbed-up music business impresario Morris Levy.
Talk about the planned hit on John Gotti and why it never actually came about.
The Chin was outraged when Gotti had fellow boss Big Paul Castellano whacked in December 1985, allowing Gotti—the "Dapper Don"—to take over the Gambino family. Gotti's failure to receive permission from Gigante and the other bosses on the Mafia's ruling commission was a violation of basic mob etiquette, and an affront to the power of the sitting Mafia dons.
There was one near-miss in the effort to kill Gotti, a bombing that killed his underboss Frank DeCicco and badly injured a Gotti lookalike who was mistakenly targeted. Gigante was also infuriated by Gotti's high-rolling lifestyle, and his courting of media attention. The old-school Chin preferred to keep his mouth shut and his business to himself.
In an odd twist, Gotti was saved in some ways by his love of attention: The constant presence of the media and the FBI made it extremely difficult for the Chin to kill his rival.
During what years exactly did the Chin run the Genovese family, and what rackets did he oversee?
Chin took over in 1980, and he basically ran the family until his second federal conviction in 2003. He ran the family from prison after his 1997 racketeering conviction, and oversaw pretty much everything under Genovese family control: construction, unions, garbage hauling, gambling—you name it, Chin probably had a piece of it. He was known among his guys as a generous boss who shared the wealth with his mob family.
He seems like an old-school mafioso you just don't see anymore, an archetype we recently got a taste of during the Lufthansa heist trial.
I think it's safe to say he was the last of that breed. I can't think of anyone with a mob pedigree like his: Protégé of Vito Genovese, would-be killer of Costello, and ultimately the most powerful mob boss in the United States. He ran the family for near a quarter-century in a business where few get out intact. The guys of his early days—Snake Persico, Fat Tony Salerno, Tony Ducks Corrallo—all went away in the Commission trial in '86.
OK, we have to talk about the Oddfather nickname and his strange behavior.
The nickname was bestowed on Gigante by the New York tabloids in tribute to his bizarre street persona. The Chin, in a long and successful effort to dodge police and prosecutors, walked the streets of Greenwich Village dressed almost like a homeless man—ratty bathrobe, funky cap and slippers. The outfit was accompanied by bizarre behavior that ranged from chatting with parking meters to pissing on the street. It was an act worthy of Pacino or De Niro, and kept the Chin out of jail for nearly three decades. If there was an Oscar for best performance running a mob family, he would have retired the award.
So wait, in your opinion, was he really crazy or was it just an act?
Crazy like a fox was the FBI's assessment. Two different federal judges ruled he was sane as well. But the act itself was a thing of twisted beauty, complete with annual trips to a suburban psychiatric facility, the weird wardrobe, the loony antics on the Greenwich Village streets. The clothes helped make the crazy man, but it was Gigante who pulled it off in public. The performance was so good that it took the federal government seven years after his 1990 indictment to get him in court, and then only after endless psychiatric evaluations by an assortment of doctors.
It remains the single most brilliant gambit in the annals of organized crime, if not crime dating back to when Cain killed Abel. He's one of a kind, and one who will never be duplicated. To run the Genovese family in two centuries, despite constant FBI attention, was astounding. And to do it with the mental incompetency dodge is the cherry on top of the crazy cake. The mob will never see his like again.
How did you get on this beat in the first place?
I was working at the Associated Press on the night of the Castellano murder, and went to the crime scene outside Sparks Steak House—it looked like the set of a mob movie, except the two bodies in the middle of the street were arriving for dinner an hour earlier. I wound up doing a lot of mob stuff after that, and Gigante always stood out from the rest of the bosses. I spent a lot of the next 18 years writing about the Chin, and was in court for his racketeering trial and his final guilty plea.
Chin's brother, Father Louis Gigante, was kind enough to meet me at the beginning of the project, which was a big help. I had a chance to speak with his daughter Rita when she wrote a book a few years back. I spoke with several mobsters, including Crazy Phil Leonetti of the Philly family and the so-called "Yuppie Don" Michael Franzese. John Pritchard, head of the FBI's Genovese Squad in the 80s, was a huge help, as were a number of federal prosecutors who helped put the Chin away, and other FBI agents involved in the cases.
If he was the last of a dying breed, what's the state of the Mafia in America?
The FBI doesn't devote the resources it once did to the mob, particularly given the threat of terrorism. I'm told the five New York families endure in various levels of disarray, but things like Commission meetings—get-togethers of all the bosses—are history now. The old bosses were known by their nicknames: Don Vito, Tommy Ryan, the Chin, Tony Ducks, Big Paul. Could anybody name the heads of the families these days?
Check out more info on the book and pre-order a copy here.
This interview has been lightly condensed and edited for clarity.

Follow Seth Ferranti on Twitter.

Ontario key place for organized crime to transform into legitimate businesses

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BY ROB LAMBERTI, SPECIAL TO THE TORONTO SUN

Ontario’s underworld seems dormant as Quebec shows rumblings for more Mob violence.
But not all is quiet in Ontario, as the province is a key place for organized crime to transform into legitimate, lucrative businesses.
A southern Ontario police source who’s kept tabs on organized crime figures says he’s watched men who have worked their way up, from being poor, violent gangsters involved in various criminal trades such as drugs, cargo thefts, extortions and loan sharking, and morphing into polite, well-polished high-end auto and clothes retailers and financiers.
It’s getting harder for law enforcement to follow the dirty money, adds Mafia expert Antonio Nicaso, as reams of dirty money are parked offshore and used as collateral in legitimate businesses.
“The next step, you can sponsor, you can give money to politicians, you can give to charity, you can do fundraising ... and you build a social presence,” he says. “Who can challenge someone with suspicious Mafia past affiliations when he is involved with charity, fundraising events.
“In Canada, we have a long list of people that started in a very strange way ... and then they become big shots in the economy and financial world,” Nicaso says.
“Who can challenge them?” he asks.
Nevertheless that veneer of respectability fails to hide some who haven’t let go of the money the underworld promises.
“When you’ve started in a life of crime and you have a criminal enterprise that’s generating $10,000, $20,000, $30,000, $40,000 a week, I don’t give a shit what anyone says, you’re not going to turn it off,” the police source said. “If you’ve been making it for 10, 12, 14 years, why would you stop?
“All they do is insulate themselves. What are (their) kids going to do? Are they going to take over (their) legitimate businesses? Absolutely. Are they going to take over his criminal enterprises? Who knows what they’re going to do?”
The source says the media image of the thug-like mobster doesn’t always match the reality of an organized crime leader.
“Because if you look at the modern-day Mob or members of organized crime, how they are in Europe and how they evolved, the modern day criminal is someone who is highly educated, has a professional career and masks his criminal enterprise behind his professional public life,” the source said.
Projects Magot and Mastiff last year revealed connections between the Hells Angels, Quebec street gangs and the Rizzuto crime family. The source noted many in law enforcement never believed Leonardo Rizzuto, son of the late Montreal Mob boss Vito, would play a role in his father’s criminal enterprise because he’s a lawyer. Yet Quebec police arrested him and Stefano Sollecito, a son of long-time Rizzuto clan supporter Rocco, alleging they are leaders of the crime family and charging them with drug- and gangsterism-related charges. Those charges have yet to be proven in court and the accused have said nothing publicly about those charges.
Some ‘Ndrangheta leaders take offence when it’s suggested they can only succeed as drug dealers, loan sharks or thieves, the source said.
But, the officer said, the source of their money concerns police who increasingly feel they can do little to stop the alchemy of cleansing dirty money.
“It’s the whole idea of legitimization,” the source said. “They come here, they develop a criminal enterprise, they work with cash, they withhold taxes, they don’t declare proper income and they start making so much money, they get involved with accountants and lawyers.”
The Mob has billions at its disposal.
The 2008 annual report on the Calabrian crime group by an Italian parliamentary committee said one can’t understand “the strength of the ‘Ndrangheta, its diffusion, its roots in the region and the expansion of its activities to the north (in Italy) and abroad, if you do not grasp in depth the nature of (its) great economic and criminal holdings.”
The Italian government manages ‘Ndrangheta portfolios involving billions of euros, thousands of companies and tens of thousands of properties. Italian authorities, for example, seized last July about two billion euros in cash plus assets controlled by one alleged ‘Ndrangheta group that police say laundered money through gambling operations.
Most of the clans have strong family and business ties to southern Ontario. The Canadian government estimates between $5 billion and $15 billion are laundered annually in Canada by all crime groups, part of a $1 trillion global industry.
“They’re building plazas, buying car dealerships, they’re business people,” the police source said of Ontario’s ‘Ndrangheta. “They sit down and have business meetings. There does come a time when it’s not about holding a gun and robbing somebody.”
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Organized crime in Ontario is too successful to stay illegal.
Quebec’s Charbonneau Commission revealed the intertwined relationships are between organized crime, business and politics and it would be folly not to expect similar links in Ontario.
“When you think of mafia, you can’t have the mafia without the politician who helps out,” says mafia expert Antonio Nicaso. “There is politics without mafia, there is corruption without mafia, but there is no mafia without politics, there is no mafia without corruption.”
Nicaso says Ontario is a safe haven for criminal organizations. While moving large sums of money and keeping low profiles, people on the whole aren’t afraid or perceive a problem — a perfect scenario to conduct business.
“The idea that there are no social alarms, no social issues, no one can say, ‘We have a problem with organized crime,’” Nicaso says. “Organized crime is not on the political agenda in Ontario, it’s not an issue.
“Inaction helps organized crime to flourish,” he adds.
Meanwhile, animosity between the crime groups in Ontario and Quebec festers as accounts remain to be settled in ongoing vendettas, a police source said.
“There are no surprises,” the source said. “They know exactly who killed what, who (they) did it for and for what reasons.

“If you’re going to keep control of the criminal enterprise, there are certain things that have to be done, it’s worth too much money.”

MICHAEL RIZZI: RETIRED NYPD COP BUSTED FOR ALLEGEDLY RUNNING $2 MILLION PROSTITUTION RING

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AARON HOMER
Michael Rizzi, a retired NYPD cop on a disability pension, was arrested Tuesday by F.B.I agents after allegedly running a multimillion dollar prostitution ring with hookers billing clients up to $2,000 per hour, the New York Times is reporting.
Rizzi was apprehended at his Brooklyn residence.
Agents from the Department of Homeland Security confiscated his computers and business records. They also found a stolen handgun in his basement. Rizzi is believed to have ties with the mafia. He is related, by marriage, to members of the Gambino crime family. He is married to Jill Juliano; her father, a soldier in the Gambino crime family, pleaded to illegal gambling charges in 2003.
The 44 year-old was a cop for nine years. He retired on a disability pension in 2000.
Federal prosecutors say he set up personal and business bank accounts to launder the millions of dollars his illegal business reeled in. His company, BJM/Manhattan Stakes and Entertainment, was active between 2012 and 2016, and had clients who paid as much as $25,000 a night for women.
Rizzi pleaded not guilty in a federal court on Tuesday. He was released on a $500,000 bond. He has been charged with promoting prostitution and money laundering. Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Robert Capers, while addressing the press, said, “with this arrest, we continue to unmask organizations that launder millions of dollars through alleged criminal networks.”
The 44-year-old alleged pimp was also the brains behind a profitable online escort service based in Staten Island known as Pure Platinum Models. It was shut down by F.B.I. agents in 2012.
In an unsealed complaint, a Brooklyn Federal Court accused Rizzi of running over 58 active websites including: EliteclubNYC.com, flygirls.com, lushplaymates.com, janeblow.com, and lusciouscompanions.com. The sites are characterized with topless women or females wearing seductive lingerie and bikinis, with a donation button listed next to their names.
Retired NYPD officer arrested, accused of running 58 escort websites: Michael Rizzi was arrested at his home…https://t.co/2oC2RRT9Mc
Rizzi’s defense lawyer, Javier Solano, insists that his client is a legitimate businessman.
“He ran an escort service that was strictly for companionship … there was no sex involved.”
He added that some women had been fired because they had been found having sex with clients.
Prosecutors say that Rizzi’s financial records show that he processed more than $2 million in credit card receipts. A court affidavit revealed that a BJM escort normally charged $400 to $2,000 per hour, lengthy services of 12 hours and 14 hours had booking rates of $7,200 and $8,400, respectively. A fleet of drivers were also on the payroll to ferry escorts to the home of clients and to high class hotels like the Mandarin Oriental and Park Central.
Rizzi always personally interviewed escorts before sending them to his retinue of wealthy clients. According to a federal complaint, one of his escorts, Jade, traveled with a wealthy client on a private jet to a Jamaican resort on a 5-day trip. When he received applications from women asking to play escort to the high and mighty, Rizzi met them in different hotels across the city before making his mind up about them. According to an affidavit, one of the women had said “I’m a fun loving girl who loves sex, I love sex and if I can get paid for it, why not?”

When an applicant refused to meet Rizzi for an interview, he had replied in an email “I get the most business, my girls make the most money, my clients are the wealthiest people in the world. I will never send a model I haven’t interviewed to them.”

Rocco Sollecito, a high-ranking member of Quebec's mafia, was shot and killed in Laval.

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Organized crime expert James Dubro says that there is likely an ongoing generational shift happening in the Montreal mob leadership.
CTVNews.ca Staff
Published Friday, May 27, 2016 11:03AM EDT
Last Updated Friday, May 27, 2016 4:50PM EDT
Montreal mobster Rocco Sollecito was gunned down in Quebec Friday morning, in a killing that experts say illustrates a power vacuum created when mob boss Vito Rizzuto died.
Sollecito was found shot in his car a few hundred metres away from Laval police headquarters. He was later pronounced dead in a hospital.
Quebec provincial police spokesman Jason Allard said no arrests had been made in the shooting. He did he identify Sollecito, but said the man who died was 67.
"On the scene, naturally, there were indications the event might be related to criminal organizations," Allard added.
Sollecito was a close associate of deceased Montreal mob boss Vito Rizzuto, who died of natural causes in 2013. He was released just months ago after serving an eight-year prison sentence.
His name was mentioned during the Charbonneau Commission, which looked at corruption in Quebec's construction industry. Stefano Sollecito, his son, was arrested alongside Rizzuto's son Leonardo Rizzuto, during a police drug raid last November.
Mafia expert Antonio Nicaso said he sees the killing of Sollecito as a “generational challenge” to the several men who made up the “old guard” alongside Rizutto.
Nicaso said one of the men -- Lorenzo Giordano -- has already been murdered and two others are in prison.
“It’s clear strategy to remove from the map the old guard of the Rizzuto crime family,” he told CTV News Channel. “It’s a powerful challenge, because he is targeting all the people who ran the organization when Vito Rizutto was in prison.”
The Charbonneau Commission “exposed some of (the Mafia’s) connections to politicians and businessmen,” so the organization is in a rebuilding phase, he added.
Nicaso added that Montreal remains a “strategic place” for the Mafia because of the contraband that flows through the city’s port.
Organized crime expert James Dubro said he agrees the hit signals a “generational shift,” with someone is trying to eliminate the vestiges of Rizutto’s senior team.
“There’s one or two more who might be hit,” he told CTV News Channel. “They’re in jail… but they can be hit in jail too.”
Dubro said that the Mafia is not as powerful as it used to be in Montreal, due to competition from other criminal groups including Haitian street gangs and the Hells Angels.
“They don’t respect the Mafia the way they once did,” he said. “Sometimes they work together, but sometimes they don’t.

A retired Montreal police investigator told The Canadian Press he suspects this was an “internal” hit, as opposed to a rival clan. "They are just bleeding internal,” he said. “It was a clean-up."

'Dirt brokers' polluting N.J., investigators say

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 By Andrew Seidman, TRENTON BUREAU
POSTED: MAY 27, 2016
TRENTON - Convicted criminals and individuals with ties to organized crime have dumped tons of contaminated soil and construction debris near residential areas and waterways in New Jersey in recent years, enabled by gaping loopholes in state regulations, investigators say.
The scheme stretches across the state, from Palmyra to Newark, according to the State Commission of Investigation, which held a three-hour hearing on the matter Wednesday at the Statehouse.
Between 2012 and 2013, a small recycling center in South Jersey became a "sprawling landfill occupied by acres of construction debris strewn within shouting distance of the Delaware River," Lee C. Seglem, acting executive director of the commission, said in an opening statement.
"It should surprise no one that the architects of this toxic trafficking include organized-crime associates and convicted criminals," he said.
Rogue "dirt brokers," Seglem said, have been able to recruit truckers to haul contaminated soil from New York to unauthorized locations in the Garden State.
Unlike solid-waste haulers, the brokers are "subject to no licensing requirements, not even simple background checks," Seglem said.
The investigation is continuing. Once it is complete, the commission will issue recommendations. As a result of the investigation so far, two Hudson County men have been sentenced to federal prison for extortion, investigators said.
The commission's findings are disconcerting not least because it released a report just five years ago exposing organized crime's role in the solid-waste industry. The current investigation is a spin-off of the 2011 effort.
In Palmyra, a 100-acre site operated by Jersey Recycling Services adjacent to the Pennsauken Creek had state authorization to accept 20,000 cubic yards annually of leaves and vegetation to be processed and sold as mulch to the general public, said Michael Dancisin, senior special agent with the commission.
The site's owner, Bradley Sirkin, skirted regulations, hauling in 19 times that amount of contaminated soil, concrete, and other materials for which he didn't have a permit to process. The debris came from construction sites in Philadelphia, Camden, and New Brunswick, investigators said.
The soil from the construction site of what was to become Camden Community Charter School and a development in New Brunswick contained levels of PAHs, a carcinogen, that exceeded safety thresholds for residential areas.
Sirkin told contractors his facility had been approved by the state to accept such materials, which was not true, investigators said.
Jersey Recycling Services (JRS) mixed clean topsoil with contaminated dirt to sell mulch to landscapers, who in turn sold it to the public, investigators said, citing interviews with employees.
However, investigators could not say definitively whether the "dirty dirt" ended up in homeowners' flower beds and vegetable gardens, since they couldn't test what had been sold.
Soon after the commission alerted the state Department of Environmental Protection to its findings in 2013, the agency shut down the Palmyra site.
The DEP took photos showing runoff into the Pennsauken Creek. The department sent Sirkin notice of violations, but by then he had moved to Boca Raton, Fla., investigators said.
Thomas Farrell, chief of the department's Bureau of Solid Waste Compliance and Enforcement, said he was working with the Attorney General's Office "to generate an order to show cause" and make Sirkin take corrective actions.
Investigators said Sirkin was convicted on federal racketeering charges in the 1990s, is related to a member of the Lucchese crime family in New York, and has a relationship with a high-ranking member of the Philadelphia mob.
A source, speaking on condition of anonymity, identified that person as Joey Merlino, the mob boss who was released from prison last year.
In a more direct connection with organized crime, bank records reviewed by investigators show that a captain in New York's Bonanno crime family gave a $50,000 "shareholder loan" to JRS through a shell company. Sirkin never repaid the loan.
Dancisin, the special agent, testified that dirt broker Frank Gillette "collected payments" from JRS. It was not clear how much money Gillette or the Bonanno crime-family member made from the arrangement.
Gillette, who investigators said has served time for petty larceny and writing bad checks, was issued a subpoena to testify at Wednesday's hearing. He appeared with his attorney and declined to answer questions, asserting his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination.
The commission also served subpoenas on Sirkin, whose attorney wrote back that Sirkin also would assert his Fifth Amendment right.
"It's all about money," said Robert Collins, another SCI special agent, describing the motivation behind organized crime's infiltration of the recycling industry. "Finding a home for soil, especially contaminated soil, is extremely expensive."
Gillette and his associate in the Bonanno crime family also were involved in a scheme to dump contaminated dirt in the Cliffwood Beach section of Old Bridge Township, according to investigators.
Hurricane Sandy caused significant beach erosion there, and homeowners sought the help of Gregory Guido, a dirt broker, to bring in fill material, according to a commission investigator.
Guido, who had been convicted on racketeering charges, collaborated with Gillette to dump contaminated material on the beach, investigators said. When homeowners saw the debris, they asked Guido to stop hauling it.
But he continued, investigators said, working with Gillette to transport the dirt, which contained known carcinogens, from a demolition site in the Bronx to Cliffwood Beach and to the Middlesex County Utility Authority. Guido, who could not be reached Wednesday, has spoken with commission investigators privately.
The chemicals are airborne, posing a danger to homeowners, and also could run off into the Raritan Bay, adjacent to the beach.
The township is capping the site as part of a remediation project that cost taxpayers there $250,000. The area will need to be monitored for the next 30 years, said agent Joseph Bredehoft.
Bank records reviewed by investigators show that the enterprise was lucrative for some. A subcontractor paid $320,000 to companies controlled by Gillette. Bredehoft also said records show that Gillette had written a $25,000 check to his contact in the Bonanno crime family.
"In short time, these people . . . had reaped great profits at the cost of the citizens," Bredehoft said.
Gary Sondermeyer, who worked at the DEP for 30 years before becoming vice president of operations for Bayshore Recycling Inc. in 2010, told the commission that inspection resources at the agency were "so limited" that these sites "are virtually unbridled."

Is the Mob Receding or Just Going Lower Profile?

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 By Timothy Ferry
Over the decades, media reports in Taiwan have depicted highly efficient and ruthless underworld organizations with exotic names such as the Bamboo Union, Four Seas, and Heavenly Way as engaged in international counterfeiting, human trafficking, gun-running, and drug smuggling.
During the economic boom years of the 1980s and 1990s, in addition, Taiwanese mobsters seemed ever-present in everything from bid-rigging on construction projects to political assassinations. Most notoriously, in 1996 Taoyuan County Magistrate Liu Pang-you and six members of his family were tied up and shot at point-blank range, a crime that remains unsolved but is generally considered mafia-linked. Other gang connected shootings of local politicians have occurred from time to time around the island. And the funerals of mafia godfathers in Taiwan have attracted thousands of mourners, including organized crime members from Japan, Hong Kong, and Macau who flew over to pay their respects.
Crime bosses have held seats in the Legislative Yuan and mafia thugs were routinely deployed by legitimate businesses to deal with disputes. The collusion among politics, business, and organized crime was dubbed hei jin – black gold – and was seen as a major stain on Taiwan’s early efforts at democratization. In the early 2000s, the hei jin problem and its impact on the business climate was regularly raised in AmCham Taipei’s Taiwan White Paper.
But does organized crime continue to play a big role in Taiwan’s political and business environment?
Police officials and criminology experts say that these gangs, after being targeted for decades, no longer have the resources to run sophisticated criminal operations. Instead, Taiwan’s organized crime groups are portrayed as small time hoods looking to brawl, party, and make money. Where liumang once commanded respect in society and were guided by strict ethics and rituals, there is wide agreement that gangs are now far less regimented. In fact, they are said to be easy to join because so few want to become members.
Whether Taiwan has actually won the war against organized crime is more difficult to assess. Even basic facts about the nature and activities of gangsters are uncertain. For example, estimates of the number of people involved in organized crime in Taiwan vary enormously. The police say a couple of thousand at most, while the U.S. Customs Department and some knowledgeable domestic sources put the total 10 to 20 times higher.
Historical background
Many historians have noted that Chiang Kai-shek had significant triad connections in mainland China, and it is known that a number of gangsters were among those who retreated to Taiwan with the Nationalist government in 1949. However, Criminology Professor Chou Wen-yung of Central Police University, one of the foremost experts on local organized crime, says that while certain criminal organization did migrate across the Taiwan Strait in 1949, all of Taiwan’s major gangs were founded in Taiwan – although the founders of at least two, the Bamboo Union and Four Seas, were from “mainlander” families.
The Four Seas, for example, came together on school basketball courts in the 1950s when the offspring of veterans from the mainland banded together to confront bullying by local jiaotou – semi-organized gangs of thugs. The Bamboo Union has a similar origin story of mainlander teens joining together to secure a place in a society in which they were an unwelcome minority. As these gangs graduated from street fighting and basketball to organized crime, their involvement with certain elements in the political and military system increased, climaxing in the notorious assassination of dissident Taiwanese journalist Henry Liu on October 15, 1984 in Daly City, California. Liu had written a controversial unauthorized biography of Chiang Kai-shek’s son and successor, Chiang Ching-kuo. Bamboo Union chief Chen Chi-li, known as “Dry Duck,” along with associates Tung Kuei-sen and Wu Tun, were accused of ambushing and murdering the journalist in his garage.
The assassins retreated to Taiwan where they remained unmolested until agents of the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigations came into the possession of a recording (given to them – by his own admission – by Chang An-lo, the legendary “White Wolf” and spiritual leader of the Bamboo Union) in which Chen Chi-li confessed to the crime and revealed that it had been ordered by the head of Taiwan’s military intelligence bureau, Admiral Wang Hsi-ling.
The United States pressed Taiwan to try the suspects, and in April 1985 Chen, Wu, and Wang were each given life sentences for their roles in the crime (Tung seems to have been cleared for his role). But just six years later, Chen, Wu, and Wang were granted clemency and released. Chang, on the other hand, was convicted of drug smuggling in the United States and served 10 years in prison, seven of them in the Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth, Kansas.
The Henry Liu case sparked international condemnation of the Kuomintang government and cemented the reputation of the Bamboo Union as a fearsome international syndicate. As a result, it also marked the beginning of widespread crackdowns on organized crime, with the first – Operation Clean Sweep – taking place in 1984-1985.
According to an interview with former Minister of Interior Wu Poh-hsiung, published in 1985 in the government publication Taiwan Journal (now called Taiwan Today), the operation was a success, entailing the arrest of 2,346 gangsters and confiscation of large quantities of guns and knives. Crime rates dropped sharply. Wu said that government surveys showed a marked reduction in violence related to debt collection and construction bids, with similar reductions in extortion of small business owners, gambling, and prostitution.
Unfortunately, these early efforts later caused a major surge in organized crime. Putting all the top gang leaders in the same prisons at the same time gave them ample opportunity to coordinate their efforts. Central Police University’s Chou says that a small-time jiaotou boss named Lo Fu-chu was imprisoned during Operation Clean Sweep, where he reportedly suffered at the hands of the other gangs. When he was released after three years, he created an alliance of local jiaotou groups – the Heavenly Way – aimed at contesting the supremacy of the mainlander gangs. It had considerable success, and the Heavenly Way reportedly remains a formidable force in Taiwan’s underworld. With deep roots in rural areas, it is reputed to control more territory and thus have more influence over elections than other criminal organizations.
The book “Heijin: Organized Crime, Business and Politics in Taiwan”, published in 2003 by Chin Ko-lin, distinguished professor in the School of Criminal Justice at Rutgers University-Newark, cites two contrasting trends in law enforcement as both feeding the growth of organized crime in Taiwan during the 1990s. Recurring police crackdowns saw thousands more arrested while others fled the country. Many gang leaders reached the conclusion that the best way to protect themselves was to get directly involved in politics and legitimate businesses.
Another major turning point was the abolishment of martial law in 1987, which reportedly led to an influx of guns and drugs into Taiwan because of the reduction in maritime patrols. Crime rates soared during the 1990s and mob infiltration of business and politics became rampant. The era of hei jin was fully underway.
Organized crime today
According to the police, the image of Taiwan’s organized crime generated during the 1980s and 1990s does not reflect the current reality. The Ministry of Justice website credits legislation such as the Organized Crime Prevention Act and the Witness Protection Act as being instrumental in combatting organized crime, enabling the MOJ to target mob-linked politicians and businesses for prosecution. Police investigators with the Taoyuan City Criminal Investigation Bureau say that the changes in the law and better-coordinated enforcement have made it possible to keep organized crime at far a more manageable level. Conducting operations against the local mobs several times a year – “mowing the lawn,” as one investigator calls it – enables them to hold the power of the mob in check
For example, despite media reports linking Taiwanese gangs to human-trafficking operations, these investigators describe Taiwanese hoodlums as incapable of running large-scale international rings. Most of the alleged cases of human trafficking, they say, involve people who came to Taiwan voluntarily, either as tourists or workers, and decided to stay. Lacking any ties to the local community, the illegal migrants turn to the mafia for help with finding work and other necessities. Many of these individuals are Southeast Asians running from their employers, and the mobsters use their vulnerability to control them, often forcing them into prostitution or other exploitative and dangerous work.
Similarly, investigators say that Taiwanese gangs lack the resources and sophistication to run elaborate drug smuggling or gun-running schemes. Instead, what they see are mafia-linked distribution networks for drugs that are already smuggled onto the island, as well as for replica guns that have been converted into working firearms.
Central Police University’s Chou says that Taiwanese mobsters spend the majority of their time partying, brawling with other gangsters, racing cars and motorcycles, providing protection for both illegal and legal businesses (including bars, nightclubs, brothels, and KTV joints), and gambling. The Taoyuan investigators say that gangsters primarily earn money through strong-arm debt collection and operating brothels.
Even here, business seems to be slow, and Chou for one sees the influence of the mafia on Taiwanese society as waning as economic and social development overtakes the primitive appeal of organized crime. For example, he observes that fewer people seek out the services of mafia-linked thugs to collect a debt; instead, redress is likely to be sought through the courts. Sources differ, perhaps for self-serving reasons, regarding the extent of continuing mob influence in the construction business. Police investigators contend that gangsters no longer have any significant presence in the construction industry, while mafioso maintain that the mob continues to play an integral role in bid rigging.
The question of the mob’s influence in politics is a major source of disagreement as well. Chou says that mob-linked politicians are no longer considered the folk heroes of yesteryear, and that voters now largely reject politicians tainted by the mob. After serving as a legislator from 1996 to 2002, for example, Lo Fu-chu of the Heavenly Way lost his reelection bid and in 2013 was convicted of stock manipulation, money laundering, and insider trading, and fled the country. He is suspected to be in hiding either in the United States, Australia, or China. In addition, the Union Party formed by Chang An-lo, the reputed spiritual godfather of the Bamboo Union, garnered a mere 20,000 votes for its candidates running for the Legislative Yuan this past January.
On the other hand, some sources familiar with the mafia say that links among politics, business, and the mob will always be present, regardless of political party. They note that politicians, mobsters, and businesspersons all need one another. Business wants attention from the politicians, politicians need business’s campaign contributions, and they both need the mob to facilitate the deal and make sure everyone honors their end. And the mob needs both money and the protection that having a well-placed friend can bring.
According to the police, some 90% of Taiwanese gangsters proclaim no political affiliation. If true, that apathy might confirm that Taiwanese gangsters don’t care about politics, but it might also support the observation that they will switch sides in a heartbeat.
While some see the lower profile of the mob in modern society as indicative of the diminished power of organized crime, Chang An-lo points to the emergence of a more sophisticated mob that has more deeply infiltrated modern society and is now less visible. Chang, who says that he hasn’t been actively involved in the Bamboo Union for over 30 years, observes that in previous decades, the arena of crime and politics was brand new to the gangsters, and that their brutality and brazenness stemmed from inexperience.
He suggests that the mafia has now become more careful and more conscious of the need for good public relations. “You know the carrot and stick?” asks Chang. “Twenty years ago it was only stick. Now, more carrots.” The mafia “always exists,” he contends. “It’s human nature.”

The News Lens has been authorized to repost this article. The piece was first published by Taiwan Business TOPICS.

Reputed Gambino mobster Gennaro (Jerry) Bruno gets 21 years in prison for hit on urinating drug dealer

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Gennaro (Jerry) Bruno, 43, was sentenced to 21 years on prison Friday.
BY JOHN MARZULLI
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS

 A reputed Gambino mobster was sentenced Friday to 21 years in prison for murdering a drug dealer while the victim was urinating on the side of a road in Queens.
Gennaro (Jerry) Bruno, 43, pleaded guilty last month to fatally shooting Martin Bosshart on Jan. 2, 2002 after stopping their car in a deserted area of Howard Beach. The motive for the hit was a dispute over marijuana.
Bruno "personally shot Bosshart execution style at close range with one bullet to the back of Bosshart's head, which penetrated his skull and perforated his brain," Assistant Brooklyn U.S. Attorney Kristin Mace stated in court papers.
Bruno was not a made member of the mob, but his resume included membership in violent robbery crews based in Ozone Park called "Young Guns" and "Liberty Posse," and he was also an alleged member of reputed consigliere Joseph (JoJo) Corozzo's faction of the Gambino crime family, according to court papers.
 Another alleged Gambino associate, Todd LaBarca, also pleaded guilty to participating in the murder and is serving a 23-year sentence.
He declined to make a statement at the sentencing in Brooklyn Federal Court.
U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder declined to seek the death penalty against Bruno for the gangland killing.

Another alleged Gambino associate, Todd LaBarca, pleaded guilty to participating in Bosshart's murder and is serving a 23-year sentence.

Mystery of Manhattan cathedral fire deepens as former Gambino mob enforcer is accused of arson by Serbian newspaper

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•           John Alite has spent years in prison in America and Brazil but is now free and has become a motivational speaker
•           A Serbian newspaper has accused ex-mobster of starting a fire that gutted a Christian Orthodox cathedral
•           Investigators believe inferno was started by candles used in earlier Orthodox Easter services that were not properly extinguished
•           But others have said the the blaze could be an act of revenge arson
•           Church figures suggest Orthodox buildings are being targeted after the church blocked a controversial Cardinal from being made a Saint
•           In 2008, Alite put his Mafia life behind him, pleading guilty to two murders, four conspiracies to murder, eight shootings and two attempted shootings
By DAILYMAIL.COM REPORTER
PUBLISHED: 23:02 EST, 7 May 2016 | UPDATED: 14:27 EST, 8 May 2016
John Alite has taken a baseball bat to countless guys. He has stabbed, shot and killed dozens more, yet despite putting his Mafia life behind him in 2008, he is now accused of setting fire to a Manhattan cathedral.
A Serbian newspaper has accused former Gambino enforcer of torching the Serbian Orthodox Cathedral of St. Sava on West 25th Street last Sunday.
Speaking to the New York Post, he called the allegation 'ridiculous.'
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New life: Mob enforcer John Alite has put aside a life in the Mafia to become a motivational speaker
Some believe the devastating fire was an act of arson carried out by people angry that the Orthodox church is attempting to block a controversial Cardinal from being made a Saint
Alite, who was released from jail in 2013, said the article was likely planted to inflame long-standing tensions between Albanians and Serbs.
'That's not what my life is about,' he said. 'I don't want to be known as the guy who used to kill people on the street.'
Alite says he called the FBI and Homeland Security when the article appeared.
'I contacted them,' Alite told the Post. 'I told them I was being accused of something. Everybody thought it was ridiculous.'
Investigators believe the blaze may have been started by candles left over from Easter services on Sunday that were not properly extinguished before being placed in a cardboard box.
Two services took place in the morning at the church, with a luncheon scheduled for 1pm that was attended by around 700 people.
Fortunately nobody was in the building at the time of the blaze, though a caretaker did attempt to extinguish the flames before suffering from smoke inhalation and being dragged to safety.
However, members of the community believe the fire may have been sparked as retaliation for a row over the church's role in blocking the canonization of Nazi-supporting Cardinal Aloysius Stepinac, which has caused a rift between Serbia and Croatia.
The theory comes after three other Orthodox churches across the globe - two in Australia and another in Russia - also caught fire on Sunday.
'His canonization, to our great regret, would return the relations between Serbs and Croats, as well as between Catholics and Orthodox faithful, back to their tragic history.'
More than 170 firefighters were called to deal with the blaze in the Flatiron district of Manhattan after it broke out at around 7pm on Sunday
 While 700 people are estimated to have attended Easter services in the building earlier in the day, nobody was inside at the time the blaze broke out
Designed by Richard M. Upjohn, founder of the American Institute of Architects, the church was consecrated in 1855 and made a New York landmark in 1968
Dusan T. Batakovic, a former Serbian ambassador, told the New York Post: 'Too many churches have burned to call it an accident.
'It is very strange that it happened, that the fires all took place on Easter, the greatest Christian Orthodox holiday. Some kind of terrorist action can not be excluded.'
Alite, meanwhile, has been out of jail for the past four years and has 'reinvented' himself as a motivational speaker who hopes to 'scare kids straight,' give corporate employees an aggressive edge and consult on movies and TV shows trying to accurately portray the world in which he once live and excelled.
For more than twenty years Alite was a high ranking member of the Gambino crime family. He worked for the Gottis – both father and son. He was, he said, 'at the top of the food chain', one of their top earners and enforcers.
He could never be a 'made' man in the mafia but he thought he was moving in a world governed by rules; codes of honour, loyalty and respect.
Then, when he was in jail in Brazil, Alite was passed secret 302s (files kept by the FBI documenting interviews with their informants) showing that John Gotti Jr, the man who had stood by him when he married his first wife in 1998, was 'a super-rat'. And everything changed.

In 2008 he secretly pleaded guilty to two murders, four conspiracies to murder, at least eight shootings and two attempted shootings as well as armed home invasions and armed robberies in New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania and Florida.
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