Updated news on the Gambino, Genovese, Bonanno, Lucchese and Colombo Organized Crime Families of New York City.

Tuesday, December 20, 2022

Underboss of the Philadelphia crime family sentenced to five years in prison



The reputed underboss of what remains of the Philadelphia mob was sentenced to five years in prison Thursday in the latest jail term to be handed out in a major strike by federal prosecutors against organized crime in the city.

Steven Mazzone, 59, was given the maximum term possible under a plea deal he struck with prosecutors when he pleaded guilty in June to racketeering conspiracy, extortion, loan-sharking, and illegal gambling. Senior U.S. District Judge R. Barclay Surrick told Mazzone he doubted any sentence would change him, noting that he had been was convicted of similar crimes in 2001.

In a courtroom crowded with two dozen of Mazzone’s relatives and friends, two of his grown daughters pleaded for mercy and said he had been the family’s rock during a series of recent tragedies. They said he had been a key caretaker for his mother, who suffers from dementia, and rallied to them after their mother — and his ex-wife — was killed in a domestic murder-suicide last December.

But Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin Ashenfelter said Mazzone had spurned a chance to leave his life of crime after serving about nine years behind bars on his last conviction. “Instead, he got out of prison and he got promoted within the mob,” the prosecutor said

Under the plea deal, Mazzone was facing a sentence of between 45 and 60 months. Ashenfelter asked for and got the full five years.

“The defendant is one of the highest-ranking members of the Philadelphia mob,” Ashenfelter said. “That’s who he is. That’s how he projects himself on the street.”

Though less well-known, Mazzone is the latest in a string of alleged top Mafia figures to be convicted by federal prosecutors. Others over the decades include Nicky Scarfo, John Stanfa, Ralph Natale, and Joseph Merlino

In a statement Thursday, U.S. Attorney Jacqueline C. Romero said that “even though the Philadelphia mob has been weakened over the decades,” prosecutors would keep pursuing it “until the mob is nothing but a memory that lives on in movies.”

Mazzone was among 15 defendants in a sweeping case made public in 2020 that targeted 10 alleged members and five associates of the Philadelphia mob, including his younger brother and former father-in-law. Of the 15 defendants, 14 have pleaded guilty. One defendant died while his trial was pending.

Federal prosecutors and the FBI, working with the Pennsylvania State Police and Philadelphia police, built the case on tapes made by informants who wore wires, along with evidence from wiretaps, camera surveillance, and law enforcement and civilian witnesses.

In the most unusual part of the indictment, prosecutors say Mazzone was caught on tape participating in a 2015 mob initiation ceremony in South Philadelphia in which his brother and four others became made members of the crime family. In the secret session, the initiates were captured pledging to “burn in hell forever if I betray my friends.”

On the tape, quoted by prosecutors in a sentencing memo, Mazzone said at one point: “We got to get a hold back on Atlantic City. … That’s what I want. We have to get that back.”

Prosecutors said the “acting boss” of the family also took part in the ceremony, identifying him in court papers only as “M.L.” That man would be the seventh or so leader of the Philadelphia mob since Angelo Bruno was shot to death in 1980, according to court documents.

A year after Bruno’s murder, his successor, Philip Testa, was killed by a bomb on his South Philly doorstep and, in the decades that followed, other bosses were sidelined by long prison terms in a string of cases brought by federal prosecutors.

In the so-called mob wars that flared for years after Bruno’s death, prosecutors said informants variously named Mazzone as both the pursued and the pursuer in a series of violent encounters. Among other allegations, authorities said, Mazzone shot to death a rival mob member in 1993. That same year, authorities have said, Mazzone’s enemies schemed to kill him, but the plot failed.

In the 2001 conviction, a jury acquitted Mazzone of allegations related to the killing but convicted him on racketeering, extortion, and gambling charges.

https://www.inquirer.com/crime/philadelphia-mob-mafia-steven-mazzone-prison-20221215.html

Sunday, December 18, 2022

Former New England mob boss turned government cooperator dies in federal prison at 89



Francis “Cadillac Frank” Salemme, the former Mafia don of the Patriarca crime family, has died at a federal prison. He was 89.

Salemme was serving a life sentence after he was found guilty in the 1993 murder of Boston nightclub owner Steven DiSarro, who lived in Providence. In March, Salemme lost his last hope for a new trial when the U.S. Supreme Court declined to hear his appeal. He was serving a life sentence at a federal prison in Missouri.

An email to a Federal Bureau of Prisons spokesperson was not immediately returned seeking more details on Salemme’s death, but the agency’s website states that Salemme died on Dec. 13.

In 2018, federal prosecutors convinced a jury of 10 women and six men that Salemme and co-defendant Paul Weadick killed DiSarro in Salemme’s Sharon home, then solicited the help of then-mob capo Robert DeLuca and his brother Joe to bury DiSarro’s body behind a Branch Avenue mill building in Providence.

Informed of Salemme’s death, DiSarro’s son Nick told Target 12: “The world is better off without him. Good riddance.”

Salemme’s former attorney Steven Boozang said that despite his persona, Salemme was always “a gentleman,” and “honest and forthright” with him in their interactions.

“I think he regretted a lot of things in his life but came from a different era,” Boozang said. “I think he felt particularly bad for the hardship that came to his family and to other families.”

In 1989, when Salemme was a rising star in the crime family, he was the target of an assassination attempt when masked gunmen opened fire on him he was walking into a Saugus, Massachusetts, pancake house.

Salemme survived, but another mob leader, William “Billy” Grasso of Connecticut, was slain. The shootings marked the beginning of a mob war that ended when then-boss Raymond “Junior” Patriarca inducted new members into the family.

After Patriarca was imprisoned in 1992 — in large part because the induction ceremony had been secretly recorded — Salemme took over as boss.

Salemme had one son, Francis Jr., who took part in the murder of DiSarro. The younger Salemme died of natural causes in 1995.

That same year, the elder Salemme was indicted in a sweeping racketeering case that also ensnared notorious South Boston gangster James “Whitey” Bulger and his sidekick Stephen “The Rifleman” Flemmi. Salemme was ultimately sentenced to 11 years in prison, and while incarcerated he learned that both Bulger and Flemmi were top-echelon informants for the FBI.

As a result, Salemme agreed to provide information to the government on what he knew about the pair, who controlled the Winter Hill Gang. (It was later discovered that Bulger had been in hiding in California at the time.) Salemme’s cooperation helped lead to the conviction of Bulger’s handler, the corrupt former FBI agent John Connolly.

Salemme eventually entered the witness protection program. In 2016, Target 12 reported that he had become a member of a New England Patriots fan club while living under an assumed name in Atlanta.

Salemme later voluntarily left the program. His final arrest came after DiSarro’s body was exhumed from behind the Branch Avenue mill building.

Weadick — who prosecutors said held DiSarro leg’s as Salemme Jr. strangled him — was also convicted and is serving a life sentence.

https://www.wpri.com/target-12/former-new-england-mob-boss-cadillac-frank-salemme-dead-at-89/