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| July 6, 2006 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Meet The Forrest Gump Of Mob Hits |
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Bearing that in mind, consider the following scenario:
A monstrous hulk of a
man, who has never been linked to any of the slayings, or
More improbable, this wily, heretofore unknown mob assassin also claims to have murdered Roy DeMeo, the prolific kill-crazy Gambino mobster who was so-feared by his peers that John Gotti – a few years before he directed Castellano’s demise – begged off when Big Paul asked him to whack DeMeo. And to make this story even more improbable, let’s say that our Forrest Gump of mob hits – a six-foot five, 300-pound bearded behemoth – claims to have murdered 200 people for fun |
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Ladies and gentlemen, meet Richard Kuklinski, (right) the star of a new book by Philip Carlo, a tome that pushes the envelope in the book store genre known as “true crime.” Carlo’s “The Ice Man: Confessions of a Mafia Contract Killer,” runs more than 400 pages. It is based on hundreds of hours of what can only generously be termed as Kuklinski’s mostly demented ramblings.
According to the
Kuklinski/Carlo version of events: In 1975, the Ice Man killed
Hoffa with a
knife, then drove his body from a Detroit suburb to Kearny, N.J. where it
was doused with gasoline and set afire in a garbage dump. In 1979, he used a
shotgun to kill Galante just as a mob backup hit team got to Joe
& Mary
Italian-American Restaurant in Brooklyn. DeMeo, his best bud at the time, served as
his wheelman.
A few years later, it was DeMeo’s turn, and the Ice Man blew him away. And in 1985, Kuklinski claimed to have been part of the most daring mob rubout in recent history, the midtown Manhattan shootings of Castellano and Billotti at rush hour during the height of the Christmas shopping season. The order came from Salvatore (Sammy Bull) Gravano, who had replaced DeMeo (left) as the Ice Man’s main mobster. Wearing a big fur hat Gravano gave him – it made him “look seven feet tall” – |
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Unfortunately, the Ice Man won’t be supplying any answers. In March, Kuklinski, whose health had been failing since last fall – he’d been in state prison since 1986 – died at age 70 from what New Jersey authorities said were natural causes.
For writer Carlo, however, Kuklinski’s death, coming shortly after his manuscript was completed but pre-publication, appears to have stoked even more fevered speculation. In an epilogue, Carlo questions the official cause of death and raises concerns that “Richard was poisoned.”
In the final pages,
Carlo quotes Kuklinski as telling his wife Barbara – who the publisher notes
is available for an interview – that “they’re trying to kill me,” and
stating later in the same visit: “If I don’t leave the (prison) hospital,
it’s because I
Who knows? Bergen County’s prosecutors could yet have a Kuklinski murder trial. Carlo, who is in southern Italy writing another book, did not respond to Gang Land’s email or phone messages to discuss that possible case. |
| Mafia Cops On Uphill Trek To Freedom |
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For those who never heard or read about Weinstein’s many pre-trial doubts about the prosecution theory, his bombshell decision was a huge surprise. In a move that stunned the city, the judge ruled that the hit-men-for-hire detectives were wrongly convicted in April even though they took part in at least eight murders.
Weinstein’s ruling hinges on the defense view – rejected by the jury – that any murderous racketeering activity by the Mafia Cops ended in 1996, and that any crimes they may have committed after they left the NYPD and moved to Las Vegas had nothing to do with their prior existence.
One last point. Weinstein didn’t seem overly confident his ruling would survive appeal. In the last paragraph of his 77-page ruling, he noted that if the appeals court “reinstates the jury’s verdict on the racketeering conspiracy charge,” his previously announced sentence of life in prison and a $1 million fine for each defendant would stand. |
| Contact Gang Land | ||
| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2006- All Rights Reserved |