Old time mobsters show up during Boston mafia trial
Francis P. Salemme, 84, arrived in federal court this week in a wheelchair, his hunched frame shrouded in a loose suit and his feet tucked into easy black sneakers. He gripped the arms of a wooden chair behind the defense table, gingerly rising for the jury’s arrival. His slight face, papery skin and wispy gray hair were a startling departure from his mug shots of long ago, back when his jaw was set like concrete.
It
can be hard to absorb that this frail man used to be known as Cadillac
Frank, a fearsome gangster who admitted to multiple killings, went to
prison for a car bombing that blew a man’s leg off, and survived an
assassination attempt outside an International House of Pancakes. He was
once a powerful mafia boss, the head of the New England family of La
Cosa Nostra, the authorities say, and a contemporary of James “Whitey”
Bulger, the notorious Boston crime boss.
Not
long ago, human remains turned up behind a mill building in Providence,
R.I., setting into motion this new murder trial against Mr. Salemme.
But the authorities say the crime itself took place a quarter-century
ago. And most everything feels like a flashback in the trial that began
this week, including the who’s who of underworld players trudging into
court in sensible shoes. It is a reminder that it has been a long time
since a clear-cut set of larger-than-life gangsters controlled New
England’s criminal underworld.
Anthony
Cardinale, a defense lawyer who has represented mobsters — including,
decades ago, Mr. Salemme — described the trial here as a “last vestige”
of such federal prosecutions. “Everybody’s been burned to a crisp here
by informants,” he said.
These
days, organized crime in New England is “in a continuous state of
uncertainty and disarray because of so many leadership changes,” said
Brendan Doherty, the former superintendent of the Rhode Island State
Police. “It’s not what it was 20 to 25 years ago, but there’s no one
trial that’s going to put an end to it.”
Mobsters
today, Mr. Doherty said, have expanded to more sophisticated crimes
than nightclub shakedowns, like major bookmaking operations, high-end
loan sharking, offshore gambling, real estate flips, fraudulent loans
and drug trafficking.
“The new young criminals coming in — they don’t even know who these old-time mobsters are,” Mr. Doherty said.
The
trial is unfolding in a city that is in some ways far different from
the one where Mr. Salemme and other bosses once held so much sway. South
Boston, the home of Mr. Bulger, has been transformed by the arrival of
young professionals. Even The Channel, a squat nightclub that the
authorities say Mr. Salemme was involved in 25 years ago, is long gone. A
glassy new headquarters for General Electric has broken ground in the
area.
Prosecutors say that back in
1993, Mr. Salemme and a son, Frank Salemme Jr., had a secret stake in
The Channel, which was managed by a real estate developer, Steven
DiSarro. The Salemmes worried that Mr. DiSarro might help investigators
build a case against them, the prosecutors say. They say Mr. Salemme
stood by as his son strangled Mr. DiSarro while another associate, Paul
M. Weadick, held his legs, then had him buried in Providence. The
younger Mr. Salemme died years ago; the other two men now stand charged
with one count of murdering a witness.
The
two men have pleaded not guilty and their lawyers called the
government’s witnesses “accomplished liars with a history of lying.”
Steven Boozang, a lawyer for Mr. Salemme, said his client has admitted
to gangland killings, but not to this one. “It was a little bit of kill
or be killed back then,” Mr. Boozang said of Mr. Salemme, who previously
pleaded guilty to racketeering. “Just because he’s done these bad things doesn’t mean he’s done this.”
Mr. Salemme helped federal prosecutors in the early 2000s by testifying against a corrupt F.B.I. agent
enmeshed in Mr. Bulger’s world, and had been living a quiet existence
in a government witness protection program, prosecutors said, when Mr.
DiSarro’s bones were discovered
in Providence in 2016. Mr. Salemme took off, and the authorities caught
up with him in Connecticut, where his car was found to contain $28,000
in cash, prosecutors said.
“These are
the remains of the marquee, the ‘glory years’ of organized crime in
Boston, whether it was the mafia or the Bulger gang,” said Dick Lehr, an
author and a professor of journalism at Boston University. “You had a
host of marquee names and players and Cadillac Frank was one of them. No
one’s emerged in the past 20 years to capture the public eye with that
kind of swagger and notoriety.”
Prosecutors
say they plan to call on an array of witnesses with complicated
reputations and nicknames to testify against Mr. Salemme over the coming
weeks. Among them: Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi, a well known
confidante of Mr. Bulger, who is said to have walked in on the killing.
And Robert “Bobby the Cigar” DeLuca, who is expected to testify about
the burial of Mr. DiSarro.
On
Thursday, Thomas Hillary, 73, an associate of Raymond L. S. Patriarca
Sr., the onetime head of New England organized crime, emerged from his
life in the witness protection program and described a bygone world from
the stand.
“We were connected,” Mr.
Hillary said, breezily recalling drug deals and rip-offs. At one point,
he sputtered with anger as he said that Mr. Salemme had throttled him at
a Chinese restaurant and run him out of town in 1990.
“Frankie
goes crazy, grabs me by the throat, bada-bing, bada-boom,” Mr. Hillary
said, before the lawyers interrupted to ask what, precisely, he meant.
https://www.nytimes.com/2018/05/11/us/mob-trial-boston.html
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