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| May 3, 1999 |
By Jerry Capeci |
| Colombo Boys End The War |
| In the last battle of the
bloody three-year internal Colombo family war that had
already claimed 11 lives, the Carmine Persico faction was so
depleted that junior wannabe gangsters were sent to whack a rival capo, traditionally a
task for made men.
The day after the hit, Eric Curcio was bubbling with joy when he visited Dino Basciano, a Red Hook, Brooklyn buddy, who testified at the murder and racketeering trial of John Pappa. "He was hugging me, kissing me, telling me, 'The war is over. I got the guy,'" said Basciano, who said that Curcio, Pappa and John Sparacino all bragged to him how they had gunned down Scopo.
The braggadocio and boasting was the young hoodlums' attempt to obtain credit and respect from their cohorts and Colombo family leaders, according to assistant U.S. attorneys Stephen Kelly and Amy Walsh. About eight months after Scopo was killed, Sparacino told Basciano about his role in the murder one night as Pappa and Curcio were leaving Basciano's social club. Sparacino threw a disgusted look at them and sneered: "They think they're a bunch of tough guys. They ain't shit. They're a bunch of punks. Remember the Scopo murder. I'm the one, I did the shooting and those two punks left me there." After the club emptied out, Basciano, found Pappa and Curcio and told them what
Sparacino had said. Their version was that Sparacino had driven off, and that after
killing Scopo they had to
"Eric looked shocked. Pappa's face turned beet red. He turned around .... and said, 'That mother fucker, I'm going to rip his heart out.' Pappa was going nuts, and I just got in the truck and left," said Basciano. Curcio and Pappa got Hennigar to lure Sparacino to his house on Aug. 13, 1994 and killed him before Curcio and Pappa could get there, according to testimony from another former cohort, Joseph Iborti. This is a case where nobody could keep their mouths shut; Iborti's testimony was based on what Hennigar and Pappa told him.
Sparacino's mother Rose, who has been in the courtroom the entire trial, began weeping during Iborti's gruesome descriptions. Judge Raymond Dearie called a recess. As the jury and Sparacino's sobbing mother left the courtroom, tears streamed down Iborti's face. Before resuming trial, Dearie advised Sparacino to spare herself the agony of more testimony, but allowed her to stay after she agreed to sit in the back and leave if things got too rough for her. "I think we have to give her one chance, we owe that to her," Dearie told defense lawyers Michael Bachner and Michael Hurwitz, who complained that further outbursts would prejudice the jury. "I have to stay," Sparacino said during a recess. "My son is dead and I need to hear about it. These were friends of his that ate at my table." Her son's body was found shot, mutilated and burned
two days after he was executed. "I killed Joe Scopo, I did all the work," Pappa complained, Iborti testified. Pappa told him he was going to walk into Curcio's auto body shop in Red Hook and kill him.
"He started making the sounds of gunshots on the phone," said Iborti, placing his right hand next to his ear in the shape of a telephone and imitating the sound of machine gun fire. "'Boom boom boom boom boom boom boom boom,' then he'd stop for a second, start laughing, and do it all over again, 'boom boom boom boom boom boom.' " Asked to describe what was going through his mind at the time, Iborti said: "This guy's nuts." If convicted, Pappa and Hennigar face life. Early on, prosecutors were considering seeking the death penalty for Pappa. |
| Gaspipe Loses Again |
The Second Circuit Court of Appeals last
week rejected arguments by former Luchese underboss Anthony (Gaspipe)
Casso that federal prosecutors had reneged on their agreement to recommend leniency
for him for information he gave the FBI from 1994 through 1997.Casso (left) gave up details about an NYPD detective who tipped Casso off to numerous investigations and was involved in two gangland slayings, told about a plan by Colombo mobsters to kill a federal judge, and how he and Genovese boss Vincent (Chin) Gigante used a munitions expert to blow up Gambino underboss Frank DeCicco as part of a plot to retaliate against him and John Gotti for the unsanctioned killing of Mafia boss Paul Castellano. Casso, however, committed crimes while housed in a unit for cooperating witnesses, allegedly lied about other crimes and refused to admit his role in others and prosecutors charged him with breaking his agreement to refrain from criminal activity and cooperate fully. The appeals court took three pages to put its stamp of approval on the prosecution's decision and 15 consecutive life sentences Casso received for a lifetime of crime that included 37 murders. Casso, 58, is at Supermax, the Florence Colorado ultra modern maximum security prison said to be even more restrictive than the 23 hours a day lockdown situation of John Gotti and other inmates at the federal penitentiary in Marion Illinois. |
| Andy Russo Wins A Little One |
Imprisoned Colombo boss Andrew Russo, who
faces about 10 years on two federal convictions -- one for jury tampering and another for labor racketeering -- for which he is awaiting sentencing,
won an appeal last month that will save him about 14 months in prison.Russo, who had been identified by the feds as both a boss and a capo in two different cases, won the prison reduction in a ruling by the same appeals court that slammed Casso. Through the testimony of a former lover, Russo, 65, was convicted at trial earlier this year of tampering with a federal jury that convicted his son Joseph of murder and racketeering stemming from the Colombo war. He subsequently pleaded guilty to three year old labor racketeering charges involving several private sanitation companies in Islip, Long Island in a deal that calls for him to receive five years in prison.
Essentially, The Second Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that Russo, who had received 22 months for a parole violation because the FBI said he was a boss, should have been classified as a capo and gotten eight months. |
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| Copyright,
Jerry Capeci, 1999 All Rights Reserved |