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| January 13, 2005 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Mikey Scars Has A Date With Persico |
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DiLeonardo, who provided devastating testimony against Gambino boss Peter Gotti last month, is poised to do the same for his closest gangster friend, John A. (Junior) Gotti, and several cohorts later this year. And while the stakes will be high for Gotti – he faces 130 years if convicted of plotting to kill radio talk jock Curtis Sliwa and two others during his reign as a stand-in boss for his late father – they could be the ultimate for another high-profile target, acting Colombo boss Alphonse Persico.
Persico, son of the
imprisoned-for-life official Colombo family boss Carmine
(Junior) Persico,
faces the possibility of execution if found guilty of the slaying of onetime
underboss William (Wild Bill) Cutolo. A final decision about capital
punishment is many months away but Brooklyn Federal Judge Sterling Johnson
DiLeonardo, who last month told of several mob sitdowns with Persico during his six-days on the witness stand against Peter Gotti, has evidence linking Persico to Cutolo’s May 26, 1999 demise, according to a secret FBI document obtained by Gang Land. Among other reasons, Persico allegedly orchestrated Cutolo’s execution as |
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A few days after Cutolo (right) disappeared – his body has never been found – he was supposed to meet Mikey Scars to iron out problems between the families regarding LaQuilla Construction, a concrete company that DiLeonardo testified was “on record” with the Colombos but was also making payoffs to the Gambino family. When he and Gambino soldier Edward Garafola arrived for their session with Cutolo, they were greeted instead by Persico and DeRoss, Cutolo’s replacement as underboss, according to a report by FBI agent William Hekel.
After getting settled,
DiLeonardo asked why Cutolo, who had been his family’s
point man in their
joint
rackets involving LaQuilla, wasn’t there, wrote Hekel.
“You haven’t heard? He’s been missing for a week,” said DeRoss. (left) “Don’t worry about Billy,” Persico chimed in, “you’ll be dealing with us now.” After Mikey Scars and Garafola had left the meeting in Dyker Heights, Brooklyn – DiLeonardo recalled that they left with between $20,000 and $25,000 – “both expressed the opinion that Cutolo had been killed,” wrote Hekel. |
| The Lawyer & Louie Ha Ha |
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Claiming that Attanasio was kidnapped by FBI agents at his Caribbean hideaway in St. Maarten, Bronson told Judge Nicholas Garaufis that he hoped to obtain justice for Louie Ha Ha in Caribbean courts and the International Court in the Hague. Assistant U.S. attorney Mitra Hormozi didn’t object to those lofty aspirations, expressing more interest in the murder and racketeering charges that Louie Ha Ha faced in Brooklyn, now that he was finally in court, nearly a year after he was indicted. When she noted that the feds would move to disqualify Bronson from representing Attanasio in the Brooklyn case for a number of reasons, Bronson quickly interrupted, halting her presentation. “That’s not necessary,” said Bronson, telling Garaufis that he had no intentions of trying the case, in which Attanasio is charged with the 1984 slaying of capo |
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Casear Bonventre, whose remains were later found in three 55-gallon drums in Garfield, NJ. Bronson, already under investigation for obstruction of justice and criminal contempt allegations, had good reasons to cut the prosecutor off. Gang Land has learned that the feds are also investigating allegations that Bronson (right) misappropriated funds from other clients and lawyers, and are looking to make a federal extortion case out of the lawyer’s alleged sexcapades with a former client who is charged with secretly importing Russian women into the U.S. to work as topless dancers.
Bronson, 59, is slated
to appear in Brooklyn Criminal Court today on state coercion charges of
threatening to sabotage an extortion case against the former client,
Viktoriya I’lina, if she didn’t sleep with him. At the time of the alleged
threats, Bronson represented I’lina in a federal indictment that is still
pending in New Jersey.
Bronson would face greatly enhanced penalties if the feds could bring an extortion charge and make it stick. The current state charge carries a maximum sentence of one year; an extortion rap could mean up to 20 years in a federal prison. As Gang Land disclosed last year, the feds are investigating criminal contempt and other charges because Bronson allowed wiseguys who were under court order to avoid contact with each other to use his office for mob sitdowns. On May, 14, 2003, Bronson facilitated a get together between Attanasio and capo James (Louie) Tartaglione, (left) according to a tape |
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recording of the meeting made by Tartaglione, who was then working for the FBI. During the session, according to a report by FBI agents Gregory Massa and Joseph Bonavolonta, Bronson wrote down the names of Attanasio (right) and two other suspects the feds had in the Bonventre murder, and then set the paper on fire and threw it into a trash can, placing his finger over his mouth in a “keep quiet” motion. At his arraignment Friday, a tanned but scowling Attanasio declined to enter a plea, supporting Bronson’s claim that he was illegally removed from the Dutch colony on trumped up charges. Bronson, who has previously denied any improprieties, did not respond to repeated calls from Gang Land about both his and Attanasio’s cases. Outside the courtroom last week, however, Bronson insisted that since Louie Ha Ha was living in St. Maarten when the indictment was filed last January, his client was not a fugitive from justice, giving Daily News reporter John Marzulli the following analogy: “If you were in China and you heard there was an indictment against you, would you come back to New York or would you stay in China and open a Chinese restaurant?” |
| Chertoff Is No Kerik |
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Unlike Bernard Kerik, who reportedly used connections with the owner of a mob-connected construction company to get jobs for his brother and a friend, Chertoff was a no-nonsense federal prosecutor – he was the lead prosecutor in the historic Commission case – who sent wiseguys to jail. In dealings with Chertoff, first as an assistant U.S. attorney in Manhattan and later as the U.S. Attorney in New Jersey, Gang Land always found him to be approachable, articulate and unafraid to answer tough questions about difficult decisions he made over the years. |
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| editor@ganglandnews.com |
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| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2004- All Rights Reserved |