Photo of former President Donald Trump and Philadelphia mob boss Joey Merlino surfaces
They share an affinity for golf and an aversion to cooperating witnesses who “flip” to help federal investigators.
But former President Donald Trump and Philly mob boss Joseph
“Skinny Joey” Merlino don’t have much to say about how they wound up in a
photo together at a South Florida golf course.
Trump posed for the photo with Merlino earlier this month at Trump
International Golf Club West Palm Beach. The two, along with an
unidentified third man, flash Trump’s customary “thumbs-up” hand signs
and smiles while wearing golfing attire.
Does Trump know Merlino? Or at least who he was?
His presidential campaign won’t say
The photo, obtained by The Inquirer, is likely to renew concerns among
Trump loyalists eager to help him retake the White House next year that
he still lacks the sort of protective political infrastructure that
would prevent a candidate for president from taking a picture with a
convicted mobster whose last stint in federal prison ended in mid-2020.
“President Trump takes countless photos with people. That does not mean
he knows every single person he comes in contact with,” said a Trump
spokesperson after The Inquirer shared a copy of the photo with his
campaign.
The spokesperson did not respond when asked if Trump knew Merlino, or his background.
Trump sparked outrage when he dined Nov. 22 at Mar-a-Lago, his Palm
Beach private club and residence, with Nick Fuentes, a white nationalist
who had shown up with Ye, the rapper formerly known as Kanye West, who
was under fire then for a series of antisemitic remarks.
That now-notorious dinner happened just one week after Trump announced his third bid for president.
Trump later complained about the outcry, claiming he didn’t know Fuentes
or about his fiercely bigoted ideology. Still, Democrats and Republican
critics railed about the dinner, and Trump’s former vice president,
Mike Pence, called on him to apologize.
The fallout prompted Trump’s campaign to enact new protocols for vetting
and approving people he met with. Those protocols were not apparently
followed at Trump’s golf course this month.
Merlino did not respond to requests for comment.
In the slightly blurry photo, Merlino wears a gray polo shirt, dark
shorts, and sneakers. A source who provided the photo and requested
anonymity to discuss it, said the third man pictured is a friend of
Merlino’s. That man also wears a polo shirt, shorts, and sneakers along
with a red “Keep America Great” baseball cap.
Trump is shown wearing a white polo shirt, dark pants, white golf shoes, and a red “Make America Great Again” baseball cap.
Merlino has made clear in the past that he admires Trump. It is unclear if Trump feels the same.
Trump and Merlino were well-known and on the rise in the Philadelphia region in the 1990s — for very different reasons.
Trump was a prominent New York real estate developer with a growing collection of casinos in Atlantic City in the 1990s.
Merlino was a leader of a violent crew on his way up to being boss of an
organized crime operation active in Philadelphia and Atlantic City.
Trump’s casino empire was eventually mired in bankruptcy, but his star
continued to rise, with increased fame from a reality television series
the following decade and then a successful run for president in 2016.
Merlino was convicted in 2001 in a racketeering case and served a decade
in federal prison. He had claimed more recently to have left that life
behind, moving to Boca Raton in Florida to work as maître d’ at an
Italian restaurant named after him.
The restaurant closed after Merlino’s most recent run-in with the feds,
which led to a two-year sentence in October 2018 when he pleaded guilty
to a gambling-related charge. Merlino, after being sentenced, echoed
comments from Trump at the time that were critical of witnesses who
cooperate with federal investigators.
“President Trump is right — they’ve got to outlaw the flippers,” said Merlino, who was released from prison in July 2020.
Trump in August 2018 said the practice of prosecutors “flipping” people
accused of crimes into witnesses who testify against others “almost
ought to be illegal” after his former lawyer, Michael Cohen, pleaded
guilty to a campaign finance crime — paying women to keep quiet about
affairs they had with Trump —and implicated his former client.
Merlino was pulled into Trump’s orbit in the weeks after the 2020
general election when a website known for trafficking in misinformation
falsely claimed he had been paid $3 million to help Joe Biden win
Philadelphia with thousands of fake ballots.
Jordan Sekulow, an attorney who had served in late 2019 and early 2020
on Trump’s legal team for his first impeachment, gave that false claim a
public boost by tweeting a link to the website.
The claim was swiftly debunked by several media organizations, including
Fox News. Even Rudy Giuliani, Trump’s attorney, called the claim
“far-fetched.”
Still, it caused Merlino some agita.
“Joey is a Trumper and any allegation of fixing this is just completely
fiction,” an attorney for Merlino told Fox News at the time, adding that
his client “is against cooperating witnesses and against making
uncorroborated deals with snitches, which is what the president is
against.”
https://www.inquirer.com/politics/pennsylvania/donald-trump-joey-merlino-philadelphia-mob-photo-golf-club-20230123.html?outputType=amp
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