V O L U M E 0 1 ... J U N E 2 6 - ... L O N G I S L A... •
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V O L U M E 0 1 ... J U N E 2 6 - ... L O N G I S L A... •
V O L U M E 0 1 - I S S U E 2 4 • J U N E 2 6 - J U L Y 0 2 , 2 0 0 3 • L O N G I S L A N D ' S N E W S A N D E N T E R T A I N M E N T W E E K L Y • W W W. L O N G I S L A N D P R E S S . C O M BELLMORE-MERRICK AND ACROSS L.I., EMS SQUADS ARE GROWING P.12 CONSTRUCTION DELAYS WHY WON'T FRED WILPON LET THE METS REBUILD? P.94 26 COVER Another Mob Family Falls O n October 3, 2001, a Suffolk County detective sat in a local diner, carefully listening to a conversation between two patrons: Charles “Charley the Wig” Tavernise, of Greenlawn, and Ridge resident James “Rocco” Ferretti. Both alleged affiliates of the Colombo organized crime family, the two were discussing how to recoup a loansharking debt that had run up to $90,000 due to mounting interest. The debtor was planning on selling his boat to pay his creditors. “The old man got a hold of me and he’s not happy,” said the 59-year-old Tavernise, speaking of his boss’ feelings about the loansharking operation. “Hey, I might have $70,000 this week. Keep prayin’ or I’m gonna smack the shit out of someone,” replied Ferretti, who is 58. “The guy [the boat owner] offered 65.” “Well get it then, get it,” Tavernise advised. “I have another guy that owes $30,000, but he just lost his job in the securities exchange,” Ferretti added. “I don’t want to hear that shit. I can’t tell the old man that,” Tavernise replied. The “old man” Tavernise referred to is alleged Colombo captain and acting consigliere Ralph Lombardo, a 72-year-old Merrick resident who law enforcement officials believe controls much of the Colombo family’s operations on Long Island—a fact to which former Colombo soldier-turned-cooperating-witness Joseph Campanella is expected to testify. The operations under Lombardo are said to include a major bookmaking and loansharking business stretching throughout LI, Brooklyn and Queens that particularly targeted young employees of stock brokerage firms. Tavernise is believed to be Lombardo’s driver and right-hand man. The Long Island Press has learned that last week, the Suffolk County D.A.’s office and the office of the U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District under Roslynn Mauskopf, working in tandem, arrested Tavernise, Ferretti, Lombardo and three others on charges including loansharking, illegal gambling, Colombo family consigliere Ralph Lombardo after his arrest on June 17 racketeering and witness tampering in a federal indictment. The arrests were the conclusion of a lengthy investigation into the Colombo family’s businesses on LI and in New York City, which included court-authorized wiretaps of phone conversations and other forms of electronic surveillance. The Colombo busts are the latest chapter in a family-by-family takedown of organized crime on Long Island. MONEY ON THE STREET Among all the various mob moneymaking schemes, two proven methods for earning serious cash are loansharking and gambling, which usually feed off one another. Gamblers down on their luck often take out usurious high-interest loans to cover their losses, which can lead to a dangerous downward spiral. The Colombos’ bookmaking business, which prosecutors say brought in tens of thousands in proceeds each week, used an off- shore wire room to process bets, an approach popular with illegal bookmakers. Bettors called a toll-free number and used an account number and password to place bets. Prosecutors tell the Press Tavernise supervised the entire gambling operation and was the primary contact with the wire room. According to investigators, the loanshark business was run primarily by another defendant, William “Whitey” Bonfiglio, who’s currently serving time on a federal extortion charge in the U.S. penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pennsylvania. After Bonfiglio’s arrest on July 26, 2001, when a ledger seized at his home reflected $500,000 in “on the street” loans, Ferretti assumed responsibility for collecting debts, and delegated some of those duties to another defendant, Merrick resident Scott Fiorello, 26, as well as others. Loans were offered at rates of 1 to 5 percent per week, equal to a range of 52 to 250 percent interest per year. Through hundreds of intercepted phone calls, investigators pieced together a litany of threats Lombardo’s crew used to collect debts. In one conversation, Bonfiglio and Ferretti visited a now-cooperating witness (possibly a gambling runner) at an auto body shop in Suffolk to admonish him for his failure to collect from others as well as pay his own debt. After instructing the person on how to collect, saying, “You sit there, you park your f**king truck and you wait for him to come home,” Ferretti added that Bonfiglio’s protection was the only thing preventing the witness from suffering the consequences of his own debts. “Where I stand, if it wasn’t for this guy [Bonfiglio] right now, let me tell you something—and I f**king mean this—you wouldn’t be walking again,” Ferretti said. “You bet somebody would be looking for you, ’cause you’d be gone.” Later in the conversation, when the witness explained he’d be able to pay his debts if he could just collect the money he was owed, Bonfiglio and Ferretti again stressed the need for threats and violence to collect debts. “After you grab the first guy, second guy, third guy, then the other guys fall into place, especially if they all know each other in a clique. These guys are married or they [have] jobs. They don’t want to be put in the hospital for a f**king week, or they don’t want to go home and the wife sees the beating.” Pending trial, Tavernise has been placed under electronic surveillance, while prosecutors have recommended that Lombardo and Ferretti be detained until trial, but the bail hearings have not yet been held. Bonfiglio continues to serve his sentence at Lewisburg. ANOTHER FAMILY IN SHAMBLES Friday, June 27, marks a milestone in law enforcement’s battle with the Lucchese family, one of the other major organized crime families currently active on Long Island. Although an adjournment has pushed proceedings back to late July, it’s the original date of the sentencing hearing for alleged Lucchese underboss and consigliere Joe Caridi, a COVER Later, on June 6, 2002, Lento and Salanardi recapped a meeting that was held at Caridi’s East Northport home, an encounter that obviously left an impression. “I’ll tell you one thing…he’s got a f**king house,” Lento said of Caridi’s home. “He must have made some money along the line,” Salanardi added. “He didn’t just make it…he’s a hustler. The guy moved around. He knows everybody.” Suffolk D.A. Tom Spota says Caridi is the number-two man in the family, second only to acting boss Louis Daidone. He has a lengthy rap sheet that includes convictions for assault, promoting gambling, possession of gambling records, attempted burglary, robbery in the second degree, several incidents of bank fraud and New Jersey convictions of gambling and conspiracy. Law enforcement sources say Caridi has been in and out of jail for a good portion of his life. His plea agreement in the federal case estimates his sentencing will be 100 to 125 months, or in the range of eight to 10 years. Caridi’s pending incarceration tops the lengthy list of Lucchese family associates prosecutors have targeted in recent months, and with Vinny Salanardi reportedly cooperating as a witness, it seems the Lucchese onion will be further peeled. Now, with the Colombo family’s local operations also under fire, investigators have put a sizeable dent in Long Island’s criminal underworld. Part One of “Un-Made Men” appeared in Issue 12, and is in the archives at www.longislandpress.com Lucchese family consigliere Joe Caridi is the prize fish investigators have landed this year Photo by Dennis Clark 54-year-old East Northport resident Lucchese Boys who pleaded guilty in March to federal charges of restaurant extortion, gambling conspiracy and tax evasion, a plea that also satisfied charges of enterprise corruption arising from a separate Suffolk County D.A. investigation. Family “capo,” or captain, John “Johnny Sideburns” Cerrella, 58, as well as five others, have also since Peter Salanardi - Cooling his heels since Dec. Vincent Salanardi - singing to the feds John Cerella - awaiting sentencing pleaded guilty to charges filed in the resident, continues to loom over the organ- December arrests. So far it appears that federal investigation. The Lucchese crime family has been ized crime landscape, and now the Lucchese Salanardi has gone into witness protection under attack for roughly the last nine family has its own informant to fear: Vincent without his wife, girlfriend and family months, since the first string of busts carried “Vinny Baldy” Salanardi, a 39-year-old members. His father, Peter, who pleaded “not out by Suffolk law enforcement in Staten Island resident also busted by feds in guilty” after being arrested in December, was November, partly over a local gambling oper- the December sweep. Charges against denied bail and has been cooling his heels in ation and the alleged extortion of the Salanardi include extortion, loansharking, a federal lockup in Brooklyn for the last six Brentwood adult business Sinderella (see witness tampering and participation in a drug months. He was expected to change his plea “Unmade Men,” Long Island Press April 10). ring that distributed cocaine and Vicodin in as we went to press. In early December, on the heels of those Staten Island bars. One has to wonder what arrests, federal prosecutors led by Mauskopf tales Salanardi is currently telling prosecutors, THE GANGSTER NEXT DOOR The arrest of Caridi and his resulting launched a second strike against the family, since he’s known as a big-time talker among consisting of a 36-count indictment with those who conducted surveillance prior to the guilty plea is undoubtedly the biggest blow to the Lucchese hierarchy so far through the charges against 27 defendants for crimes tak- arrests. In addition to discussing internal politics, recent busts. Already fighting an enterprise ing place on Long Island and in the five borthe feds’ tapes of Salanardi’s conversations corruption charge filed by Suffolk County oughs. The charges focused primarily on typical gangster business—gambling, racketeer- reveal the bloody, violent side of the mob. For District Attorney Tom Spota, Caridi, or ing, loansharking and restaurant extortion— example, on February 5, 2002, Salanardi told “Joe C.,” was brought in by feds for extortion as well as running a Staten Island drug ring. a debtor who didn’t have the money due that (particularly at a popular Nassau restaurant), With a few exceptions, the busts largely day, “If I stick my foot down your f**king running a nationwide sports betting operafocused again on Lucchese family associates throat and break your f**king jaw and forget tion that operated through an offshore Costa and, as in the Suffolk case, Caridi topped the about the $5,000, are you going to be Rican wire room and defrauding the IRS. happy?…Make sure you’ve got the whole bal- The feds say that “despite a lavish lifestyle” he list of those involved. “In this case, making extensive use of elec- ance you owe me f**king Friday, you under- failed to file personal income tax returns from tronic surveillance and federal-local coopera- stand? Or f**king Saturday you’re gonna be 1997 to 2001. As a “made” man of considertion, we and our partners in law enforcement planted in the f**king hospital.” On other able power and influence living in suburbia, a have successfully uncovered and uprooted occasions he threatened to break the same football dad who even talked business with organized criminal activity in Nassau, Suffolk, debtor’s legs and “hospitalize” him. In associates during games, the comparisons to Queens, Kings, Richmond and Bronx coun- another conversation, 48-year-old Lucchese another well-known underboss—Tony ties, and have dismantled a violent and enter- associate Ralph Lento, of Brooklyn, told Soprano—were inevitable. Through phone conversations between prising crew operated by the Lucchese family Salanardi he’d just gotten into a fight with Lucchese members intercepted as part of the another man, possibly a wiseguy in the consigliere Joseph Caridi,” Mauskopf says. On the day of the plea, Caridi, perhaps Gambino family. “I just had a beef. I hit a federal investigation, Caridi appears to be a showing a bit of the old-school “stand-up guy…I hit him in the f**king head. I hit him man both feared and respected, who was disguy” gangster ethic, initiated a semantic argu- in the face. I hit him with The Club [anti- trustful of phones and preferred meeting associates in person. His reputation as an ment with Judge Steven Gold, refusing to say theft device], blood all over.” Law enforcement officials confirm that earner and higher-up in the family was conhe was a part of the Lucchese family, but Salanardi has begun cooperating as a witness firmed through several very specific discusrather part of a “conspiracy” or “enterprise.” Gold eventually allowed the plea to stand and was moved from general population in sions. For example, on April 3, 2002, Lento without Caridi speaking the Lucchese name. Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Correction Center discussed with Vincent Salanardi a dinner the to a special prison unit for informants. night before at a Nassau restaurant the family Sources say Salanardi’s chitchat, recorded by allegedly took over. Several Lucchese THE SONGBIRD But while some alleged mobsters stead- feds on tapped cell phones, led to many of the members, including Caridi, attended the fastly honor their vows of silence, prosecutors charges against him, as well as those against dinner. “That other guy can be a nasty guy,” continue to build cases with the use of turn- his 61-year-old father, Peter, girlfriend Stacy Lento said. Dileo, 31, stepdaughter Desirae Rizzo, 25, coat informers. The implications of the “Who, Joe?” asked Salanardi. “Everybody reported defection this year of Bonanno and 42-year-old brother-in-law Arthur can be nasty when the reins are in their hands.” “Harvey” Tarzia, as well as 22 others in the family underboss Salvatore Vitale, a Syosset 27 28 COVER Scene Stealers Our Love Affair with Mobsters in the Media BY BRENDAN MANLEY O ne place where the mafia will always exist, despite the relentless efforts of prosecutors, is in film and television. Thousands of die-hard fans wait breathlessly for the new season of The Sopranos to start, and millions tune in to watch the show (12.5 million viewers nationwide watched the 2002 season finale). But in reality, Tony Soprano is one of the last people we’d want to come knocking at our door. Organized crime dramas draw us into a world of murder, money and excess that most of us can only imagine—and we like it that way. Our love affair with the mob is an illustration of bizarre paradox and vicarious escapism. “Americans are fascinated with crime. If you look at movies and TV, they’re absolutely filled with stories about crime,” says Dr. Joseph M. Conforti, a distinguished professor of sociology at SUNY Old Westbury and author of the paper Good News and Bad News: The Mafia is No Longer la Cosa Nostra, but There Are More Mafias Than Ever. “When it gets to the point where it’s organized, it becomes even more intriguing.” Organized crime in New York dates back to the origins of the state. From the first English settlers to later waves of German, Irish and Italian immigrants, those who struggle to get a leg up in society have historically tended to band together and do things their own way, often outside of the law. Martin Scorcese chronicled the bloody 19th century struggles of New York’s Irish population in his epic film Gangs of New York, based on the book by Herbert Asbury. But for much of the late 20th century, the image we associate with organized crime is the Italian gangster—the Mafioso—a subject Scorcese knows well. Hollywood films like The Godfather and Goodfellas made tales of New York’s gangster underworld legendary. Now the latest mafia-centric sensation, HBO’s The Sopranos, has further fueled our cultural obsession with the mafia and successfully transplanted this storyline into the 21st century. “The way the mafia’s been depicted over the years is one of intrigue—plots within and between the groups, violence of various kinds and warfare,” says Conforti. “Another part is the depiction of Italians. The American audience is interested in the depiction of lower-class Italians; people who often don’t speak articulately or are emotional and get excited. [Mafia stories] bring together an almost perfect medium of entertainment.” Indeed, by portraying an ordinary ‘middle class’ mafia family, rather than the operagoing, Italian-speaking, elegant characters in The Godfather, The Sopranos may have brought mafia portrayals closer to reality. But some will tell you that the Sopranosinspired surge of interest in all things mafia is actually contradictory to the true, modern, real-world state of la Cosa Nostra. After years of battling increasingly empowered prosecutors and coexisting with new emerging ethnic gangs, many believe the Italian mob’s glory days are behind it. “I’m fascinated that the [mafia] image is so much alive, even though the Italian mafia is so much dead,” says Conforti. “If you look at the recent arrests, they’re generally older guys. They’re not recruiting as many young men.” Mafia experts say that organized crime chooses the person, not the other way around. While there’s likely to be an occasional Sopranos viewer who contemplates the charms of the cash-infused and lawless life of a gangster (not to mention the benefits of running a strip club), the mafia generally isn’t something you sign up for. “Things are not done that way,” Conforti explains. “People who get into this are recruited at a personal level—through kinship, neighborhood affiliation, etc.” Nonetheless, Suffolk County law enforcement, notably District Attorney Tom Spota and Police Commissioner James Gallagher, are making strenuous efforts in their gang-related arrest briefings to shatter the Hollywood gangster mystique. “I hope this sends a searing message, not only to the people who are in or attracted to this criminal enterprise known as the Lucchese crime family, but to others who may be attracted because they’re looking at a TV show called The Sopranos and some other TV shows,” Spota said at one such briefing recently. “They should know that if they are attracted to this life of crime, then we’re coming after them.” According to the August 2001 Public MindPoll conducted by Fairleigh Dickinson University, 26 percent of Sopranos viewers polled think the show is “pretty much telling the truth about people and events it depicts,” whereas 62 percent think the show is “just a story,” and 12 percent were unsure. Only a third of viewers polled knew the show was set in New Jersey, but those who did were more readily accepting of the plotline as truth. “The data shows that most viewers think of The Sopranos as ‘just a story’ and not ‘the truth’. Maybe this is just an enjoyable television show that has captured a decent share of its target audience and nothing more,” said Professor Gloria Gadsden of Fairleigh Dickinson University, commenting on the survey results. “Rest easy, parents of America, your daughters and sons probably won’t aspire to join the mob or shoot up a school watching this New Jersey-based program.” What concerns Conforti is not that Americans choose to embrace the violent, hard-and-fast lifestyle portrayed in the mafia fable, but rather the incorrect racial stereotypes that may also become part of this myth. No longer the newest wave of immigrants on the block, he says the majority of Italian-Americans in this country live honest, legitimate, tax-paying lives, and that organized crime is now dominated by emerging immigrant groups coming from Russia, Latin America, Asia and the Caribbean. But movies about the Italian Mafioso are simply more interesting than movies about real-life Italians. “Who wants to see a movie about an Italian-American dentist or accountant?” he asks.