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| August 12, 2004 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Joe Waverly Aims To Make A Deal |
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Sources say that Joe Waverly and the feds are close to working out a plea bargain that will close the book on a racketeering indictment that includes four 1987 murders, extortion and a host of other crimes. Cacace has been jailed awaiting trial for the past 19 months. But that may have been a respite from the pressures of mob life. He told a task force of cops and agents who arrested him on Jan 22, 2003 that he had been “lucky” to survive two shootings, but that mob life had taken its toll on him: “I’m kind of relieved that I’m going to jail,” he said. A health food nut who supplements his diet with fish oil pills, Cacace initiated the plea negotiations after watching two Mafia bosses – each with top-notch trial lawyers on the case – and other fellow inmates get hammered during recent racketeering trials in Brooklyn. Sources say federal prosecutors in Brooklyn are pushing for more than 20 years, adding that there were still several additional issues to be resolved. Neither Cacace’s lawyers, Michael Macklowitz and Gino Josh Singer, nor assistant U.S. Attorneys Patricia Notopoulos, Katya Jestin and Joey Lipton, would |
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comment about the plea discussions. Sources say, however, that an agreement is likely and could be reached any day now. Trial is scheduled for next month. “The deal isn’t finalized yet, but my best guess is that it will happen,” said a usually reliable Gang Land source.
The heart of the
indictment – as Gang Land disclosed four years ago – is a charge that Joe
Waverly ordered three underlings to kill burly 46-year old
The feds got their first big break in the case in 1997, when Frank Gioia Jr., a turncoat Luchese soldier, told the FBI that mob associate Frank Smith (left) and two others had killed the elder Aronwald on orders from Cacace. At first, Gioia, who began cooperating in 1995, had withheld that information because he and Smith’s sister Kim had been lovers and she had borne Gioia’s son. Gioia turned on them when he learned that Kim Smith had taped conversations with him and given them to members of the Luchese family. After several starts and stops, Frank Smith also agreed to cooperate. He detailed his role in Aronwald’s slaying and three additional 1987 murders, all allegedly committed at Cacace’s direction, to bring an end to the relatively charmed gangster life that Joe Waverly has had since the mid 1970s. |
| Tale Of Two Turncoat Vinnys |
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After years of debate,
Congress established sentencing guidelines in the federal court system in an
effort to correct disparate and unequal prison terms that defendants were
receiving for similar crimes around the country. Now might be a good time for the U.S. Attorneys in Manhattan and Brooklyn to arrive at a more evenhanded way of dealing with mob defectors who violate their cooperation agreements with the feds. Consider the cases of two turncoat wiseguys named Vinny. There was a big hue and cry when Vincent (Vinny Ocean) Palermo, (right) a real Soprano songbird, disclosed three years after he began cooperating that he had secretly given his son $1.7 million of his proceeds from a Queens topless bar he had operated. Vinny Ocean made the revelation last year in the middle of his testimony against three DeCavalcante capos, prompting outraged federal prosecutor John Hillebrecht to tell a Manhattan jury the feds might tear up the agreement that called for leniency for Palermo despite four murders, nine murder conspiracies, and other violent crimes. Palermo had been required to turn in any money he had squirreled away or that others were holding for him, and his explanation that the $1.7 million was |
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Meanwhile, in Brooklyn, sources say, turncoat Luchese soldier Vincent (Vinny Baldy) Salanardi, (left) a violence prone drug dealer and loanshark, held back information about a $15,000 usurious loan he had given to a businessman. He also failed to say that his girlfriend had collected $900 from the businessman after Vinny Baldy began cooperating in April 2003. When confronted, sources said, Salanardi explained that in 2002, months before he was indicted, the $15,000 loan became an investment when the businessman, the co-owner of a Brooklyn car wash, said he was on the outs with his partner and asked Vinny Baldy to become his new partner in the business. Salanardi then stopped collecting payments, sources say. But after he began cooperating, according to the sources, his girlfriend began bugging him for money to pay bills. At the time, Vinny Baldy was broke and being held without bail. So he did what any love-struck prisoner might do: He told her to go ask the businessman for money. Salanardi’s story is certainly no worse than Palermo’s – Gang Land thinks Vinny Baldy’s is more believable – and the $900 that Vinny Baldy’s girlfriend received |
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is miniscule compared to the $1.7 million that Vinny Ocean claims was a “gift” to his son. But when push came to shove, sources say, Assistant U.S. attorney Thomas Seigel decided that Salanardi had breached his agreement, and is currently pushing a committee that deals with the issue in Brooklyn to toss him out of the Witness Protection Program. Meanwhile, Hillebrecht’s anger at his cooperating witness has disappeared. Neither
prosecutor would talk about his case but the rationale behind their own
disparate and unequal responses becomes clear in court records. Seigel
At the time of Palermo’s big fib, however, Hillebrecht still needed him to testify against Federico (Fritizi) Giovanelli, a Genovese wiseguy (right) who went to trial last May and was convicted of alerting Vinny Ocean and other New Jersey gangsters that they were about to be indicted in late 1999. |
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Classic Sketch Auction On eBay A dozen years after the classic confrontation between superstar cooperating witness
Salvatore (Sammy Bull) Gravano
and
John Gotti, award-winning sketch artist Ruth Pollack says it still remains
her most electric courtroom experience. A limited
edition, numbered print
of her drawing and an autographed copy of
"Jerry Capeci's Gang Land: Fifteen Years of Covering The Mafia" went
up for bids
on
eBay late yesterday, August 11. The no-reserve auction ends August 14. |
| editor@ganglandnews.com |
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| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2004- All Rights Reserved |