0 registered members (),
121
guests, and 30
spiders. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
Forums21
Topics43,473
Posts1,090,508
Members10,381
|
Most Online1,254 Mar 13th, 2025
|
|
|
Ten to One Shot
#32699
09/14/05 12:11 PM
09/14/05 12:11 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
OP
RIP StatMan
|
OP
RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
|
The other Frankie Pentangeli thread made me think of this line:
"Ten to one -- ten to one shot you said -- ten to one shot he would take the 5th -- and I lose."
Presumably, Frankie did not want to testify, so his comment would seem to imply that if Michael had taken the 5th, which apparently everyone thought he would do, he (Frankie) wouldn't have had to testify.
But it seems to me that he would have had to testify in order to support Willi Cicci's testimony whether Michael took the 5th or not.
To put it another way, suppose Michael had taken the 5th? Why would Frankie not have had to testify?
"Difficult....not impossible"
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32700
09/14/05 12:21 PM
09/14/05 12:21 PM
|
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 8 Belfast, Northern Ireland
Don Jimbob
Associate
|
Associate
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 8
Belfast, Northern Ireland
|
Forgive the ignorant Irish, but what's the 5th amendment? That has been bugging me so much.
"It's A Sicilian message. It means Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes."
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32701
09/14/05 12:27 PM
09/14/05 12:27 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
OP
RIP StatMan
|
OP
RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
|
It's the 5th ammendment to the U.S. Constitution.
A person has the right to refuse to testify if the answers he would give would be incriminating.
He can't be forced to testify, in effect, against himself.
"Difficult....not impossible"
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32702
09/14/05 12:38 PM
09/14/05 12:38 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238 The Ravenite Social Club
Don Cardi
Caporegime
|
Caporegime

Joined: Aug 2001
Posts: 18,238
The Ravenite Social Club
|
Originally posted by plawrence: To put it another way, suppose Michael had taken the 5th? Why would Frankie not have had to testify? Very good point Plaw. But is it possible that Pentangeli was talking about Willie Cicci taking the 5th? That would make more sense to me. If Cicci had taken the 5th, then Pentangeli's testimony would have been worthless because there would have been no need for corroboration. Don Cardi 
Don Cardi Five - ten years from now, they're gonna wish there was American Cosa Nostra. Five - ten years from now, they're gonna miss John Gotti.
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32705
09/14/05 12:40 PM
09/14/05 12:40 PM
|
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058 The Slippery Slope
plawrence
OP
RIP StatMan
|
OP
RIP StatMan
Joined: Aug 2002
Posts: 15,058
The Slippery Slope
|
That's true, DC. It could have been Cicci he was talking about, since the comment would then make more sense.
But the scene in which he says it comes right after the scene in which Michael testifies, so I always assumed it was Michael he was talking about.
"Difficult....not impossible"
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32707
09/14/05 01:54 PM
09/14/05 01:54 PM
|
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721 AZ
Turnbull
|

Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721
AZ
|
I think there's a simpler explanation: Frankie, just after his narrow escape from death, was "half-dead, scared, talking out loud [to the New York detectives] about how you [Michael] betrayed him." He agreed to sign affidavits for the Congressional committee about Michael's criminal activities. But he probably balked at the prospect of testifying against him in an open hearing, where he and his abandonment of omerta would be exposed to millions of his fellow Americans. So the FBI guys told him, "Don't worry, Frankie--ten to one he's gonna take the Fifth. That's tantamount to an admission of guilt. You won't have to testify." They may have meant it. More likely, they were in on the plot to trick Michael into perjuring himself by keeping Frankie's survival secret. Since Frankie was "on ice" at an Air Force base, there'd be no way he could know that his survival was being kept secret from Michael. There'd also be no way of him knowing about Cicci's testimony if they decided not to tell him.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32709
09/14/05 02:20 PM
09/14/05 02:20 PM
|
Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721 AZ
Turnbull
|

Joined: Oct 2001
Posts: 19,721
AZ
|
No. The committee was not a court of law. They had no power to indict Michael for any crimes. They did have the power to subpoena him, swear him in, and compell him to testify. If he lied under oath at that hearing (i.e., committed perjury), the committee did have the power to recommend to a US Attorney that Michael be charged with perjury. His perjured testimony would be on their record.
The beauty part: Michael might never have been convicted in any court of law of any of the crimes the committee accused him of (like running all the gambling in the US, killing Sollozzo and McCluskey, the Great Massacre of 1955). Any prosecutor who tried to would have had to find witnesses, get jurors who weren't intimidated, etc. But they wouldn't have to prove any of those crimes to convict him of perjury--lying under oath. He could be sent away for five years on each count of perjury. Here's an example from real life:
Alger Hiss was a high-ranking State Department official in the Thirties and Forties. A former Communist, Whittaker Chambers, accused Hiss of being a Communist agent, a member of his local Commie group, or "cell." The House Un-American Activities Committee called Hiss to testify. He denied the charge under oath, and said he'd never even met Chambers, much less served in same Communist "cell" with him. But thanks to the doggedness of a young Congressman and committee member named Richard M. Nixon, it was proved that Hiss had met Chambers years earlier. Hiss was convicted of perjury--lying under oath. Even though the committee never proved he was a Commie or a spy, the perjury conviction ruined Hiss.
Ntra la porta tua lu sangu � sparsu, E nun me mporta si ce muoru accisu... E s'iddu muoru e vaju mparadisu Si nun ce truovo a ttia, mancu ce trasu.
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32711
09/14/05 03:13 PM
09/14/05 03:13 PM
|
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 8 Belfast, Northern Ireland
Don Jimbob
Associate
|
Associate
Joined: Sep 2005
Posts: 8
Belfast, Northern Ireland
|
Thanks for the explanation.
I don't think it could be Cicci he was referring to because in the senate chambers Tom Hagen, when pleading Michaels case to allow him to read out his own statement, says, "My client has not hidden behind the 5th ammendment, though it is his right to do so."
"It's A Sicilian message. It means Luca Brasi sleeps with the fishes."
|
|
|
Re: Ten to One Shot
#32713
09/14/05 05:53 PM
09/14/05 05:53 PM
|
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 330 Warsaw
Joe Batters
Capo
|
Capo
Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 330
Warsaw
|
Is it true that unlike bacfk in the day with Mob bosses pleading the fifth 157 times that now they get convicted for contempt??? I've always been curious of that ![[Linked Image]](http://www.gangsterbb.net/emoticons/fisheszzz.gif) Joe Batters
Aspanu summon the all of the chiefs DEATH TO ALL WHO BETRAY GIULIANO!
|
|
|
|