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New England Mafia Is Weakened But Still Pursued

New England Mafia

LAURA CRIMALDI   06/26/11 04:55 PM ET   AP

BOSTON — When James "Whitey" Bulger ruled the streets of South Boston, the New England crime scene was a battleground for a bloody turf war between the Italian Mafia and Irish street crews.

But some observers say the organized crime landscape that took shape during Bulger's 16 years on the lam – ending with his capture days ago in California – is a shell of its former self, hobbling along with "old men in diapers" at the helm.

"It's over," said Boston defense attorney Joseph J. Balliro Sr., who represented crime figures Vincent "Jimmy the Bear" Flemmi, an FBI informant believed to have killed at least eight people, and Henry Tameleo, the reputed consigliere of the New England Mafia.

Flemmi and Tameleo both died in prison decades ago.

A string of prosecutions, gang warfare and the march of time have sent many made men to prison or the grave. The ruthless crime syndicates powerfully depicted in movies including "The Godfather" and "The Departed" have seemingly lost much of their box office luster in real life. And even the chase of mobsters has been splintered by the terrorism focus put on law enforcement by the Sept. 11 attacks.

"They got their hands full with terrorism," said former Bulger associate John "Red" Shea. "These mob families have been taken apart."

Bulger, 81, was captured Wednesday in Santa Monica, Calif., where he apparently had been living for most of the time he was a fugitive. Bulger, who appeared Friday afternoon inside a heavily guarded federal courthouse in Boston to answer for his role in 19 murders, told a judge he could pay for a lawyer if prosecutors would give him back money seized from him.

Carmen "The Cheeseman" DiNunzio, the reputed former underboss of the New England mob, pleaded guilty to federal bribery charges and is serving a six-year federal prison sentence. Another former boss, 83-year-old Luigi "Baby Shacks" Manocchio, is locked up awaiting trial on charges he extorted thousands of dollars from strip clubs in Providence, R.I. Manocchio, who has denied the charges against him, was among 120 suspected mobsters and associates arrested in January.

Gennaro "Jerry" Angiulo, who ran the rackets for the Patriarca crime family in Boston from the 1960s to the early 1980s, died in 2009 at age 90. The site of Marshall Motors in Somerville, which served as the headquarters for the Winter Hill Gang once led by Bulger, is now a church.

"They keep chasing old men in diapers," said Rhode Island defense attorney and former Drug Enforcement Administration agent Raymond Mansolillo, who briefly represented Manocchio. "I think it's a waste of taxpayer resources."

The Italian crime operation La Cosa Nostra, however, remains the top organized crime threat in New England, said FBI supervisory senior resident agent Jeffrey S. Sallet. The Rhode Island-based Sallet heads up organized crime investigations for the FBI's Boston division.

"Because somebody is not a young man doesn't mean they are not dangerous and cannot order acts of violence," said Sallet, who arrested Bonnano family crime boss Joseph Massino in New York in 2003. Massino, who later was convicted of orchestrating a quarter-century's worth of murder, racketeering and other crimes, this year became the highest-ranking New York Mafia member ever to testify for the government.

Sallet said law enforcement put a dent in the mob at the same time that sea changes in traditional Italian neighborhoods such as the North End and East Boston shrank the "talent pool." There are ethnic organized-crime groups with roots in Asia and Eurasia that have set up in Boston, Springfield and Lowell, but they haven't had the chance to get entrenched, Sallet said.

"We gave (La Cosa Nostra) a substantial head start before we started putting them in jail," said Sallet, noting that racketeering laws were passed in the 1970s. "They've been in operation since the 1930s."

Rhode Island state police Col. Steven G. O'Donnell said the poor economy and the tightening of legitimate credit markets are other reasons to keep the heat on organized crime.

"Especially in a bad economy, they have dirty money working for them. They put it on the street at shylocking rates," said O'Donnell, who infiltrated Irish organized-crime crews in Massachusetts and Rhode Island as an undercover officer in the 1990s.

"I don't think law enforcement would close the books until it's eradicated," O'Donnell said. "It will never be eradicated."

Some critics of law enforcement's mob obsession say the public would be better served if attention were paid to lucrative drug operations in Mexico, the Dominican Republic and Colombia, street violence and emerging ethnic crime groups.

"I think that's a lot of bluster on behalf of law enforcement to justify their budgets. The old days of so-called organized crime have been dead for some time," said Boston defense attorney Anthony Cardinale, who represented DiNunzio and Francis "Cadillac Frank" Salemme, a former Patriarca family boss believed to be in the federal witness protection program. "Instead of going after an old man for getting a couple hundred dollars a week from a strip club, they should be going after true criminal behaviors like drug cartels."

Shea, 45, says the mob faltered in part because its members gradually gave up on their golden rule: a code of silence.

"There was a code that, people today, they don't do that," said Shea, who now earns a living as an author. "It's a total lost cause today."

In some ways, today's New England mob members aren't that different from the Hollywood producers who relish Mafia tales.

"They want to tell their story," said Providence police Capt. Thomas Verdi, who led the department's organized crime unit for six years. "The reverence that they once had is virtually non-existent. They have nothing but their stories."

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BOSTON — When James "Whitey" Bulger ruled the streets of South Boston, the New England crime scene was a battleground for a bloody turf war between the Italian Mafia and Irish street crews. But...
BOSTON — When James "Whitey" Bulger ruled the streets of South Boston, the New England crime scene was a battleground for a bloody turf war between the Italian Mafia and Irish street crews. But...
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cuoi
The obstacle is the path
08:04 AM on 06/27/2011
Mobs have evolved into more sophisticated organizations. Want a hit? Go to Xe. Need weapons and all manner of supplies for war? Money no object, taxpayers pay for all at highest possible juice rates...go to Halliburton.
07:36 AM on 06/27/2011
When they are done with the geriatrics can they go after the Mexican drug cartels, you know those guys who are actually pose a threat.
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studana51
Old and tired
05:48 AM on 06/27/2011
No, they've just moved into banking and finance, where they can make more $$ and never worry about doing any time.
02:25 AM on 06/27/2011
The Color Purple. The new Purple Gang of Detroit, which didn't start until 1919, went to New York in the 70s. The beginning was somewhere in and around Hastings Street, which lay about six blocks west of where the GM Cadillac Assembly Plant now stands, in Detroit’s lower East Side, and perhaps was sometime around 1915-1917. For some weird reason, this parish became known as 'Paradise Valley.' The 18th Amendment was ratified in 1919, to take effect from January 16th, 1920. It had been passed in 1917 through the Senate by a one-sided vote after only thirteen hours debate. A few months later, the House of Representatives debated it for a full, whole day! Poem then: Prohibition is an awful flop. We like it. It can’t stop what it’s meant to stop. We like it. It’s left a trail of graft and slime, It’s filled our land with vice and crime, It don’t prohibit worth a dime, Nevertheless we’re for it.

Elvis Presley sang: …The drummer boy from Illinois went crash, boom, bang, the whole rhythm section was The Purple Gang.
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dekendall
01:20 AM on 06/27/2011
The first two pictures seem to be different menThe ears are very different as well as the mouth turned down in the right hand picture and the mouth is turned up in the man on the leftThe nose is very different in each photo. The eyes are different as well. The set of 3 photos next show what possibly could be the same man.
07:17 AM on 06/27/2011
So!
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AGammaRaye
Awake!! Independent.
01:18 AM on 06/27/2011
Let him tell his tales, let the corrupted squirm, let the indictments begin. But don't assume at 81 he is devoid of muscle and influence!! He didn't amass $800,000 that still shows in cash no less and who knows how much else squirreled away--- by being stupid!! I suspect he still has a network...
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Lilybelle
I read, therefore I think, therefore I am
01:52 AM on 06/27/2011
he wont tell
01:18 AM on 06/27/2011
There is alot of organized crime not just Italian and Irish crime associated with the mob We lived organized crime with our father's probate

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1Jkx50M8b8w&feature=watch_response

Those responsible are still walking free The Bank of Hawaii the attorneys for the stepmother The DA in San Luis Obispo looks the other way Check out what the organized crime of Kelly Gearhart and his attorney Grigger Jones have done while the DA's office in San Luis Obispo California and other federal agencies look the other way

http://www.standupca.org/news/kelly-gearhart-accused-of-diverting-1-million-to-salinan-indian-casino-effort/
01:11 AM on 06/27/2011
I don't care if they are old, if they have done wrong then they should see justice. While I can understand why the defense attorney wanted to state that the men are in diapers (to make it seem as if they are no threat), I find it disturbing that an educated person like an attorney would be so disrespectful of the elderly. I think we need to be more repectful to the elderly in general.
01:03 AM on 06/27/2011
It is imperative that every available law to help stop illegal activity is at the disposal of our federal and state law enforcement and individual citizens. Our president needs to stand behind this 100%. He needs to get involved in helping our border states, and needs to be active in punishing those in his adm for their radical actions.
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Mike Davis 747
12:56 AM on 06/27/2011
As ruthless as Bulger was, he couldn't hold a candle to Joe Kennedy when it comes to viciousness and downright contempt for the law. Joe Kennedy was a bootlegger during Prohibition. He had a liquor distributorship in Winsor Canada. Most of the liquor he sold, he sold to gangsters in the U.S. He was also part of the notorious Mayfield Road Gang out of Cleveland, Ohio. According to fellow gangster and Kennedy cohortnMo Dalitz, Kennedy was responsible for as many murders as the infamous Al Capone. Kennedy made a fortune and used his ill-gotten wealth to buy his worthless sons into politics. Hopefully, Ted Kennedy and his drunken drug addicted son Patrick are the last we will see of the Kennedy crew.
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Jeff Stork
The Future is not what it used to be.
01:15 AM on 06/27/2011
Are you alleging that Joseph Kennedy murdered nineteen people, many with his bare hands? That's a prove it or retract it allegation.
02:29 AM on 06/27/2011
Kennedy was a member of a back perforating gang based in Cleveland, OH. Did you read about it and have reason to dispute that statement? If so, please state.
02:54 AM on 06/27/2011
I made a trip to wikipedia and got this, too.
Another interesting sidenote was that future US Ambassador to Britain, billionaire and father of president John F. Kennedy, Joseph P. Kennedy was allegedly a leading Prohibition era rum runner and whisky baron in Massachusetts, Rhode Island and New York. Kennedy made his legitimate billions in banking, real estate and the Hollywood movie business, but he was an alleged associate of gangsters Bill Dwyer, Owney Madden, Danny Walsh, Frank Costello, Al Capone and is also mentioned in Joseph Bonanno's book, "A Man of Honor". In recent years information on Joseph Kennedy has been leaked to the media and various investigative reporters linking him to these gangsters, exposing his Prohibition operations.
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alientotech
12:52 AM on 06/27/2011
great job!>>>now wwhen are you going to break the corporate-wall street- political mob??
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Mike Davis 747
12:41 AM on 06/27/2011
The real interesting chapter of this story is yet to come. If Bulger goes to trial as opposed to pleading guilty to all the charges, then we might find out why he was able to evade detection and capture for so long. There has already been one FBI agent in Boston convicted and sent to prison for helping Bulger but I doubt he was the only law enforcement officer involved in covering for Bulger in one way or the other. Cultivating informants is risky business for law enforcement, and informants seem to be where things go terribly wrong for law enforcement. Hopefully, he will go to trial so the public can have an understanding of what went wrong and who was responsible for his sojourn from justice.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Lilybelle
I read, therefore I think, therefore I am
12:57 AM on 06/27/2011
Yes Mike, that will be interesting to see what unfolds, and what dirty laundry gets exposed here after all these years.

Assuming the truth that gets told now, which may or may not happen. Part of the mob credo is that their secrets will die with them, so there is no real reason to expect the police to get a lot of information from him after all this time. Stay tuned.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jr Palmer
11:30 PM on 06/28/2011
If he makes it to trial when the goverment dont want the public to know then they die in jail some how
12:40 AM on 06/27/2011
Someone do me a favor. Go research every person who has been shot in a shoot out
between two rival street gangs...by mistake..not the intended victim and see if I adds up
to more then 19. And I mean the entire United States for the past 40 years.
And the 19 he killed, most were rivals..Or did he just walk down the street..shoot
the 1st person he saw. boarded a bus and shot the driver..walked to the house next to him..and shot the cleaning lady, walked into a market and shot the cashier...I think our priorities are a tad mixxxxed up... as usual.
12:50 AM on 06/27/2011
So what he should go free? Murder is murder
01:13 AM on 06/27/2011
True, most murders are committed by people the victim knew.
12:34 AM on 06/27/2011
these over-the-hill-mafs could valuably assist in plans to capture future mafs and/or terrorists. Take notes and print books of this info for criminal law students. Our young is at risk. School students who, at the beakoning call of greedy teachers, skip class to go protest. Umm umm umm.
12:30 AM on 06/27/2011
This is what the article reported: Bulger, who appeared Friday afternoon inside a heavily guarded federal courthouse in Boston to answer for his role in 19 murders, told a judge he could pay for a lawyer if prosecutors would give him back money seized from him.

Uh...either the money "seized" from him is stolen, extorted, or ill-gotten gains. This guy is living in an alternative reality. Give him the money back? I am still laughing at the total cluelessnes of this guy in making the statement.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Jr Palmer
11:32 PM on 06/28/2011
well it would be better if the goverment gave it to the people instead of taking the money them selfs and when they do take money from people where does they money take a guess