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| December 1, 2005 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Big Paul Hit Still Plays In NY Courts |
The spectacular December 16, 1985 slaying of Mafia boss Paul Castellano and one of his henchmen riveted the city for weeks. An entire generation of New Yorkers is unlikely to forget the grisly photographs of the slain mobster lying sprawled on a sidewalk, surrounded by police in front of Sparks Steak House on East 46th Street. They also learned a new name they wouldn’t soon forget: John Gotti. Virtually overnight, he went from being just another unknown Queens hoodlum to a swaggering symbol of Mafia arrogance and power. And while the Dapper Don died in prison more than three years ago, following his conviction for orchestrating the murder of Big Paul and others, the fallout from that gangland-style slaying still reverberates in the city’s courts. For John A. Gotti, who tried with little success to fill his father’s shoes, the Castellano hit is part of the backdrop in the still-unresolved blood-feud between Junior and ABC radio talk show host Curtis Sliwa. The younger Gotti still faces |
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For Anthony (Tony Roach) Rampino (right) – one of numerous heroin dealers the elder Gotti selected for the Sparks rubout – the assassination is a kind of ghost of Christmas past. As Gang Land reported last week, state prosecutors in Manhattan have argued that Rampino’s status as a “backup shooter” in the hit should negate his claim that his 25-years-to-life drug dealing rap should be cut by 17 years due to recent reforms in the tough Rockefeller drug laws under which he was sentenced. Tony Roach was allegedly poised for action across the street from Sparks in case the four designated shooters – all wearing Cossack-like hats and long overcoats – failed in their quest to whack Castellano and key aide Thomas Billotti.
According to court papers, Lino, who carried out his assignment perfectly, was shot to death by Mafia Cops Louis Eppolito and Stephen Caracappa on orders from Luchese underboss |
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The Mafia Cops, who face trial in February for Lino’s slaying as well as nine additional murders and a slew of other racketeering crimes from 1982 to 2005, are scheduled to appear in court today to enter not guilty pleas to the latest indictment in the case.
The Castellano murder
was also invoked last month by federal prosecutors in Manhattan. In court
papers, they asserted that Lino’s brother-in-law, Salvatore (Fat Sally)
Scala, (right) took part in the rubout – the
pair allegedly fired the fatal shots into Billotti – in a successful bid
to block Scala’s bail request as he awaits trial for extorting protection
money from a Chelsea topless joint from 1992 to 2002. Scala faces trial next month for shaking down a total of $2.5 million from the V.I.P. Club. He is about to conclude a five year rap for a shake down on a Long Island porn dealer in which Scala, 62, reaped a grand total of $50, according to court papers. Only Gotti was ever charged with the murders of Castellano (left) and Billotti, but all told, there were ten men allegedly assembled along East 46th between Second and Third Avenues that December evening. All |
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are dead or incarcerated – all, that is, except for capo Vincent Artuso, (right) a designated shooter who never pegged any shots at Castellano, his assigned target. Artuso was a Bronx-based heroin dealer at the time, having served a few years for a 1976 federal conviction. He and soldier John Carneglia approached Castellano with guns drawn as he opened the front passenger door of the black Lincoln that had parked in front of Sparks at about 5:25 P.M. But only Carneglia fired any bullets into the strapping 6-foot, 2-inch mob boss, felling him instantly with shots to his head and upper body. According to Gravano’s account at Gotti’s 1992 trial, Artuso’s gun jammed. But for years, wiseguys whispered that Artuso, in the words of one source, “wasn’t up to the job and froze.” Whatever the scenario, “Vinny was embarrassed about it,” the source added.
In December 1995, 10
years and three days after the cause of his
Until Gravano tabbed Artuso, now 61, as a designated shooter, some investigators thought that Gotti, who had the same physical stature as Artuso, had been on the street for the hit. That idea was based on a witness who reported hearing |
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“Where the hell are they,” he was overheard saying shortly before they drove up. “They were supposed to be here by now.” As for the other plotters, their crimes caught up with them, one way or another: Angelo Ruggiero (right) died of cancer in 1989 before he could be tried as a heroin merchant. Co-defendant Carneglia, 61, was convicted that same year. He is scheduled for release in 2018, a few years after Gravano completes his own sentence for drug dealing. Mob associate Joseph Watts, 63, who has been in prison since 1996 for murder and fraud convictions, is due out in May.
The feds have never
linked mobster Dominick (Skinny Dom) Pizzonia,
a longtime Gotti pal from Ozone Park, Queens, to the
Castellano rubout, but law
enforcement sources
say he was a backup shooter stationed near Second Ave.
Pizzonia, 64, faces murder charges for another Christmastime mob hit. Along with two accomplices, he allegedly killed Thomas and Rosemarie Uva, a Bonnie & Clyde-style holdup team that had robbed mob social clubs. In a bit of mob irony, the hit took place on Christmas Eve, 1992, just as the Uvas were finishing up their holiday shopping in Ozone Park. |
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Wiseguy Builds Courthouses; Buys Suits |
| With a little help from New York State Controller Alan Hevesi, reporter Tom Robbins took a ride to Bethel, Connecticut to dig up some dirt on a filthy rich but little-known Genovese wiseguy who buys suits for mayors and builds roads, schools, courthouses and lots of other things all around the Metropolitan area . In this week's Village Voice. |
| Contact
Gang Land |
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| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2005- All Rights Reserved |