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| May 25, 2006 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Mickey Boy, The Mouth That Roared |
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Michael (Mickey Boy) Paradiso, 66, (right) who has spent two decades behind bars during a 45-year-long crime spree, may ultimately be best remembered as the man who unwittingly drove the rival Luchese family into a murderous and now notorious partnership with two corrupt NYPD detectives. But it was Mickey Boy’s mouth that got him nailed in an FBI probe: The Gambino capo was tape-recorded boasting of his thirst for violence and murder to get what he wants. “If I use my hands, I might kill somebody. Because I’ll kill him. I’ll stab him. I’ll cut his fucking throat,” Paradiso was overheard saying on an FBI bug about an unidentified antagonist three months ago. “When I get mad, I’m just a different person. I don’t rationalize, and I don’t like to get like that. I really don’t and …rip his head off.” Despite that tough talk, Paradiso so far has no homicides on his lengthy rap sheet. He has convictions for crimes from hijacking to heroin trafficking in four of the city’s five state courts and in federal courts in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Newark. By his own count, however, Mickey Boy has 10 murders on his mob resume. In a 1986 discussion with his brother Philip, who was wearing a wire for authorities then investigating several Brooklyn slayings, Mickey Boy blurted out |
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that he
had killed a low-level hood named Frank Morici eight years earlier because
Morici had informed on Philip. “This morning,” Mickey Boy told his
brother, “they showed me a
piece of paper. There’s 10 names there. I killed
Paradiso was indicted last week by a federal grand jury in Brooklyn – along with two underlings – for loansharking. However, he will soon be tagged with extortion, drug dealing, gambling and other racketeering crimes, according to court papers filed in federal courts in Brooklyn and Central Islip. One codefendant, George Milo, 50, was released on bond, and longtime Paradiso associate, Frank (Frankie Fox) Romano, 47, (left) should be able to post suitable surety to win his release. No matter what, however, the feds will seek to detain Mickey Boy as a danger to the community.
A third Paradiso crew
member named in the court papers, reputed soldier Angelo S. (Junior)
Ruggiero, 34, is the son of the late Gambino capo
Angelo
“The term ‘legitimate tough guy’ is overused today, but it applies to Mickey, especially if you add the word ‘crazy’ to the description,” said one law enforcement source. |
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However, according to court records, Gotti marked Mickey Boy for death in November of 1986 after learning that he had sent three cohorts to kill Luchese underboss Anthony (Gaspipe) Casso (left) as part of a long-running feud between Casso and the elder Ruggiero, who died of cancer in 1989. At the time, Mickey Boy had just finished an eight year stretch for hijacking, and was free on $500,000 bail as he awaited trial for dealing heroin from federal prison. He managed to evade Gotti’s wrath when FBI agents alerted a federal judge about the Dapper Don’s murder contract and the judge immediately revoked Paradiso’s bail.
But that didn’t stop
the bloodshed. Casso launched a mob-cop alliance by
Paradiso remained off the streets when he was convicted of dealing drugs while incarcerated. He was paroled in |
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1998, and after a parole violation rap the following year, was again released on parole in 2000. Prison didn’t exactly have a calming effect. In a particularly venomous pre-Christmas outburst last December, Mickey Boy railed to a cohort that he wanted to whack his daughter and his son-in-law because they had shown him so little “respect,” according to court papers filed by Brooklyn federal prosecutor Joey Lipton. “I told her,” said Paradiso, “I did 19 years (in prison) with niggers, and I had better Christmases, Thanksgiving, and any holiday in there than I had here, because every time I’m here your husband got a fucking attitude that one day I’m going to shoot him in his fucking head and you going to make me crazy and I’ll end up shooting you too.” In numerous other Yule time rants, Mickey Boy voiced similar plans against more traditional targets who had crossed the angry wiseguy, including loanshark customers and low-level associates who owed him money, Lipton alleged. Paradiso promised to sever the head of one “little old man” who ducked his |
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obligations, and tell him: “I respect you, you’re old, everything, but don’t give me what you did.” Mickey Boy insisted that, unlike other less-committed mobsters, he’s not afraid to carry out his threats, even if it means a prison term: “I’ll shoot the guy in the head. I don’t know who else is going to do that. In other words, they won’t pull that tough guy shit when the time comes. Me, I’ll do what I say. I don’t give a fuck if I go to jail for that stupid player.” Citing five months of taped conversations in which Paradiso “repeatedly discusses resorting to violence, including assault and murder,” Lipton has asked that Mickey Boy be detained without bail to await trial. “Mr. Paradiso’s mouth has always been a cause for concern, but that’s just the way he speaks,” said James DiPietro, who won an acquittal for Paradiso in a 1989 murder trial at which jurors heard a tape recording of his client boasting that he had killed Morici and nine others. “If you believe the rantings of Mr. Paradiso,” said DiPietro, “there would be no one left standing in the five boroughs. Actions speak louder than words, however, and in the end, as a jury determined 17 years ago, all the tapes show is a man blowing off steam.” |
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