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| April 19, 2007 |
| By Jerry Capeci |
| This Bud's For Junior |
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The new turncoat is Peter (Bud) Zuccaro, (right) a longtime mob associate who will soon make his debut as a government informer at the ongoing trial of capo Dominick (Skinny Dom) Pizzonia. Pizzonia, 66, is charged with three mob rubouts including the 1992 slayings of Rosemarie and Thomas Uva, a husband and wife team that robbed mob social clubs. The Pizzonia case is only a warm-up for Team America’s latest recruit, however, with the bigger show expected to come later against the wiseguy the feds most want to nail. Sources tell Gang Land that Zuccaro, 51, has linked Junior Gotti to criminal activity that the FBI and federal prosecutors in Brooklyn are currently investigating with a view towards ultimately putting the Junior Don behind bars again. Zuccaro, a drug-dealing Gambino associate who operated in New York and Florida, has admitted several murders, including at least one for which he faced |
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Gang Land reported 16 months ago that Bud had decided to cooperate under pressure of a possible life sentence as the leader of a multimillion dollar a year drug ring that sold high quality marijuana that was harvested in high-tech, hydroponic warehouses across the street from elementary schools in Brooklyn and Queens. The Gotti (left) probe is in its early stages, sources said, declining to disclose any specifics about the investigation, including whether the allegations include violence. They stressed that the potential charges would not be barred by the statute of limitations, however. But even under liberal racketeering statutes that can be a difficult maneuver, as shown by Gotti’s last encounter with the feds.
Junior, who often voiced an intention to move his family far from his New York mob ties at his last trial – both in person and during tape-recorded jailhouse conversations with |
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cohorts – still resides with his family in a mansion in Oyster Bay Cove, Long Island.
At Pizzonia’s trial, Zuccaro is expected to add little to the prosecution’s case about the Christmas Eve slayings of the modern-day Bonnie & Clyde team (left) who hit Skinny Dom’s Café Liberty social club twice, according to the charges. The case is being prosecuted by assistant U.S. attorneys Joey Lipton and Paige Petersen. An FBI report in the case states that Zuccaro “heard that Skinny Dom killed the Uvas on Woodhaven Boulevard. The Uvas had robbed Skinny Dom’s social club. This was the reason the Uvas were killed.” But, sources said Zuccaro will corroborate much of what another prosecution witness, Anthony Ruggiano Jr., will say about the murder of Frank Boccia, whom |
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Boccia, a small time hood who was married to Ruggiano’s sister, was murdered for slapping around his wife’s mother, who happened to be the wife of Gambino soldier Anthony Ruggiano Sr., who was then incarcerated. The killing was sanctioned by the late Dapper Don, sources say. “Zuccaro and Ruggiano were buddies and Bud will have a lot to say about the demise of Boccia,” said one source. Boccia, whose body has never been found, was dumped into the Atlantic ocean and in the words of another source, “is swimming with the fishes.”
Two weeks ago, the trial was put off until September, soon after Ruggiero and a codefendant received intriguing |
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Ruggiero, (right) who has been held without bail in less than desirable accommodations at the Nassau County jail for six months, had been pushing long and hard for a speedy trial. Soon after the visits, Ruggiero’s attorney, James Froccaro, requested an adjournment. Corozzo was likely engaged in normal due diligence, mining Ruggiero for any negative insight he might have about his former buddy Bud that the attorney might be able to use during cross-examination. Rosen said his meeting was with the codefendant, and that the timing of his and Corozzo’s visits were coincidental. The big puzzler is why Ruggiero, who has been griping about his lousy situation, would put off his day in court and possible freedom for four more months. In a May trial, his lawyer would be able to use any negative information that Corrozo might develop, and the feds would have little time to rehabilitate their new witness if he were to be less than a smashing success on the stand. Either way, expect both sides of the law to be watching Zuccaro’s upcoming court performance the same way scouts at spring training eye a promising rookie. |
| Squabble Over G-man Trial Date |
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Lawyers for the ex-agent have asked the trial judge to proceed with the scheduled May 15 hearing to determine whether the indictment was tainted by improper evidence gathering by members of the prosecution team or – as attorney Douglas Grover put it in court filings – a “cottage industry of self-styled forensic investigators and journalists” the Brooklyn District Attorney’s office allegedly used during its probe.
In his papers, Grover
notes that from March 16, when the DA’s office agreed that the pretrial
hearing was necessary, through April 5, it had “not contacted either Angela
Clemente or Peter Lance – two witnesses who are essential to the … hearing”
or the appropriate federal authorities to secure government witnesses
At issue is whether testimony that DeVecchio gave under grants of immunity, or leads from that testimony, were used to obtain the indictment, which charges DeVecchio with helping mobster and FBI informer Greg Scarpa Sr. (right) commit four Brooklyn murders from 1984 to 1992. In its papers, the DA’s office now asserts that the hearing, should it be necessary, be conducted after the trial, which it has asked to be put off until September. Tomorrow, Supreme Court Justice Gustin Reichbach will hear oral arguments from both sides. |
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Capeci P.O. Box 863 Long Beach, NY 11561 Copyright, 2007- All Rights Reserved |