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| August 17, 2006 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| Feds: We've Got The Right Barney |
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Nearly six years and thousands of tape-recorded conversations later, the FBI finally got the evidence it needed to obtain an indictment charging onetime acting boss Liborio (Barney) Bellomo with Coppola’s murder. The breakthrough, according to a secret FBI affidavit obtained by Gang Land, came on July 31, 2004 when longtime mob lawyer-crime family messenger Peter Peluso detailed Bellomo’s alleged role in the slaying during a quiet talk he was having with veteran Genovese capo John (Buster) Ardito. During the discussion, wrote FBI agent William Inzerillo, Peluso told how Barney – who had sponsored Coppola’s induction and later promoted him – had authorized family leaders to whack his former protégé during a jailhouse conversation he had with Bellomo a few days before the murder.
Peluso gave the feds
what they previously lacked, a witness to the murder conspiracy. As a
result, Bellomo, 49, was tagged with the slaying early this year. But the
evidence of his connection to Coppola’s murder, Gang Land has
The unwitting catalyst for Bellomo’s involvement in the slaying, according to court records and knowledgeable sources, was a young man named Daniel Provenzano, a nephew of late Genovese capo Anthony (Tony Pro) Provenzano, someone Bellomo insists he never met. The younger Provenzano (left) fancies himself a movie maker. In fact, he wrote, directed, and produced a fairly |
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Bellomo’s Provenzano-related problems began several years before the movie, when Provenzano was nabbed on June 12, 1997 by a New Jersey state and federal task force and accused of trying to extort half of an insurance company from its owner for a $40,000 gambling debt. Before his arrest, Provenzano had been tape-recorded telling his victim that his mob superior, Barney Bellomo, was a “stone-cold killer” with a dozen hits on his resume and that Bellomo had demanded a $100,000 tribute from the insurance executive. The following April, the New Jersey Attorney General’s office subpoenaed Bellomo, who was then in a federal prison in Atlanta serving time for a 1996 New York extortion case, to appear before a state grand jury investigating Provenzano’s activities. Barney was not happy about that. Not only was the Mercer County prison a virtual hell hole compared to his digs in Atlanta – he was locked down 22-to-23 hours a day, he claimed – but he was the wrong Liborio (Barney) Bellomo. How many Liborio Bellomos with the nickname Barney could there be? As it happens, there are at least two, according to affidavits submitted by the former |
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They are often confused for each other, with good reason. Their fathers are brothers, who, to make matters even more baffling, married a pair of sisters. In court papers supporting his cousin, Liborio Thomas wrote that the two were often confused. Strangers “would incorrectly attribute to me things that were meant for my cousin,” he wrote, “or they would attribute to my cousin, things that were meant for me.” More importantly, Liborio Thomas, who is two years older than his cousin, was sure that he was the Barney Bellomo that authorities wanted to question. He had worked for a Provenzano printing company for 11 months and was present at a meeting Provenzano had with his alleged victim the previous year. Their complaints fell on deaf ears however. On successive days, state and federal judges rejected their arguments, and Barney – that is, the acting boss Barney – was granted immunity and ordered to testify, or face criminal contempt charges. Meanwhile, the case against Danny Provenzano dragged along until November 2002, when on the eve of trial, he copped a plea deal, and began serving a 10 year prison term the following year, just as “This Thing of Ours” was being released. It was while the jailed Bellomo was trying to extricate himself from New Jersey that Peluso went to visit his client at the Garden State holding facility. It was there, |
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As further proof of Bellomo’s involvement, agent Inzerillo quoted an apparently relaxed talk overheard on an FBI bug between Peluso and Ardito (right) two years ago on a Saturday afternoon in Mario’s restaurant on Arthur Avenue in The Bronx. The conversation, in which Peluso discussed Barney’s alleged role in unusual clarity and detail, began with the men discussing suspicions that Coppola’s relatives and the feds had that Bellomo was involved in the slaying. “Ralphie Coppola’s sister, she told the agents that this could never have happened without Barney giving the okay,” said Peluso. “Well,” replied Ardito, “they got him down (for it.) That’s why he’s doing so much fucking time (in prison.)” At that point, Peluso spelled it out for Ardito, confirming what Coppola’s relatives and the feds had suspected when he went missing on September 16, 1998. “John,” said Peluso, “he was in the can. He was in the can. They came to me, |
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‘When are you going to see Barney. This is between us. Tell him we’re having a lot of trouble with Ralphie. How does he feel if we do what we got to do?’” “I went there. I took Barney by the machines where you buy the sandwiches. He said, ‘Pete, I’m in here. They’re out there. They know what’s what. They got to do what they got to do. They got to do it.’ I came out, and two days later he was gone.” Peluso will surely expand on his remarks from the witness stand. Several months after the lawyer implicated himself and Bellomo in Coppola’s murder, he became a turncoat, and wore a wire for nearly a year. But none of the resulting conversations, nor anything he can say from the witness stand, is likely to have the impact of the words he uttered on July 31, 2004 when he didn’t know the feds were listening.
Not so, says Bellomo’s
lawyer Barry Levin. “The guy’s a big windbag,” said Levin,
asserting that during
the lengthy probe, Peluso was heard contradicting himself
numerous times. “He’s
making up stories to try and make himself feel important, To add insult to injury, the feds recently re-drafted Bellomo’s indictment, and added an obstruction of justice charge that accuses him of lying about his New York federal extortion case during his testimony before the Garden State grand jury in 1998. As for Danny Provenzano’s film, interested readers can check it out online at, what else, www.thisthingofoursthemovie.com. |
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| Jerry
Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2006- All Rights Reserved |