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Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
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This is the full transcript of Vincent "Fish" Cafaro's testimony taken from the 1988 Senate subcommittee investigation on organized crime. Lots of interesting stuff here concerning the Genovese family in the early to mid 80's. Sorry for the format, it was taken from an OCR version of a PDF.
TESTIMONY OF VINCENT CAFARO, NEW YORK, NY, ACCOMPA- NIED BY DAVID T. EAMES, OF BODIAN & EAMES, NEW YORK, NY Senator NUNN. First of all, as I understand it, Mr. Cafaro, you currently remain under Federal indictment on various criminal charges in the Southern District of New York. Is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Given the fact of that indictment, I want to advise you of your rights as a witness before this Subcommittee, and if there are any questions, you and your attorney certainly can confer, and you can certainly pose those questions to us. First, you have the right not to provide any testimony which may tend to incriminate you. Do you understand that right? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Do you understand that if you do testify here this morning anything you say here may be used against you in other legal proceedings? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Second, you have the right to consult with an at- torney before answering any question or questions before the Sub- committee. Any questions we may pose this morning, you have the right to confer with your attorney before answering that question. Do you understand that right? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. In that regard, I would certainly suggest to both of you that if you do want to confer, and if the attorney feels a need to confer, he is welcome to do that, and we will give you time for that before we require an answer. Mr. Cafaro, the Subcommittee looks forward to your testimony this morning. I know you have previously provided the Subcommit- tee with a signed, sworn, rather detailed affidavit, which we will not hear in total this morning, but we will make it a part of the record.1 Is that correct, that you have given us an affidavit? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. I understand that you have a shorter prepared statement, and we will be delighted to have you present that state- ment at this time. Once you complete that statement we will have questions for you. Again, we appreciate your being here this morn- ing, and after Senator Roth, our ranking member, gives his open- ing statement, we will turn it over to you. Senator Roth. OPENING STATEMENT OF SENATOR ROTH Senator ROTH. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. It is fitting that we conclude these hearings on traditional organized crime by focusing on the organized crime capital of this country, New York. Not only is New York important because it is the home of the most powerful LCN families in this country, but it is also the head- quarters for many of our Nation's most important industries. By exerting undue influence on industry through its control of ancillary businesses and labor unions, organized crime can use its base in New York to wield immense economic power throughout the country. As we will hear this morning from a former member of one of the New York LCN families, the primary means by which orga- nized crime obtains control over legitimate business is through its control of labor unions, and that is the real power behind the LCN in New York. Organized crime's control of organized labor results in organized extortion. Kickbacks can become just one of the costs of doing busi- ness. Of course, most labor unions in New York and elsewhere are not involved with, or under the influence of, organized crime. But in these hearings we are necessarily concerned with those few that are. Mr. Chairman, I would like to take this opportunity to commend you, and Chief Counsel Eleanore Hill, as well as your staff, for fo- cusing the attention of this Subcommittee and the American people on the problem of organized crime. Under your direction PSI has continued to carry out its impor- tant mandate to investigate and eliminate organized crime. Per- haps in 25 years, hearings such as these will be unnecessary, and the only evidence of the LCN will be in crime novels and old movies. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator NUNN. Thank you very much, Senator Roth. Let me just add a word. We are going to hear a good bit about some industries, and some labor unions this morning, and as Sena- tor Roth has just stated, when organized crime does control either organized labor unions, or segments of industry, it is indeed very serious. I think we need to put it in a broader perspective, however, before we begin. We have had testimony over and over again before this Subcommittee, over the years, that in some cities, and perhaps New York is one of those in which control by organized crime of labor is disproportionate perhaps, but, overall, most labor unions, most labor leaders are honorable, law-abiding citizens. We are going to hear some exceptions this morning in that con- text, and I hope we do put it in that context. I think the same thing can be said about business in this country. We are going to hear about corrupt businesses this morning, but that does not mean that all businesses in America or in New York City, or any- where, are corrupt. So I think we have to put it in context, and where it happens we have to be very concerned about it, but it is important to keep our perspective. Mr. Cafaro, we are delighted to have you this morning. We are pleased that you are cooperating and we welcome your testimony, so why don't you proceed. Mr. CAFARO. Good morning, Mr. Chairman, and members of the subcommittee. My name is Vincent Cafaro, known to my friends as the "Fish". Thirty-six years ago, when I was 17 years old, a kid in New York City, I got "pinched' or busted for possession of 2 ounces of "junk," meaning narcotics. Senator NUNN. Mr. Cafaro, if you want to pull that mike down a little bit, I think it might be easier. Just take your time now. We have got plenty of time. You have got all the time you need. Just take your time as you present your statement. Mr. CAFARO. Yes, sir. My grandparents went to "Fat Tony" Sa- lerno, at the time a soldier in the Genovese family or "brugad," for help. Fat Tony took me aside and gave me some advice: leave the junk alone; if you need money, go out and steal. Six or 7 years later, around 1958, Fat Tony came to me and asked me if I wanted to work for him in a numbers office. I said yes, and stayed with Fat Tony for the next 25 years. In the end, Fat Tony had become, in many ways, like a father to me. In 1986, the Federal Government charged Tony, myself, and 14 others, amico nostra, for, among other things, racketeering, extor- tion and conspiracy. Tony and the others are now awaiting a jury verdict on those charges in New York City. Shortly after the indictment was re- turned, I began cooperating with the FBI and the U.S. attorney's office. I agreed to and did wear a wire for the FBI for 5 months in New York City. In October 1987, for a number of reasons, including con- cern for my family, I informed the prosecutor's office that I no longer wished to cooperate, and was placed in custody to await trial. I am providing this statement independently of any agreement with the U.S. attorney's office. My case and all the charges against me remain pending. I have not been given any immunity by the Federal Government or by this subcommittee. In 1974 I got "straightened out." In other words, I became a "made" member of the Genovese family or the "brugad," a true amico nostra. This is not something that you ask for. It is some- thing that you are offered by the family, if they feel you are worthy. Our family or our "brugad" has approximately 400 members, with a definite hierarchy: a boss, an underboss, and a consigliere, followed by 14 caporegimes. Each caporegime has a crew of at least eight. The boss of the Genovese family is Vincent Gigante, also known as "Chin." Bobby Manna—Louis Manna—is the consigliere. Until his death in April 1987, Sammy Santera was the underboss of our brugad. Beginning in the early 1980's, Fat Tony Salerno was generally recognized on the streets as the boss of the Genovese family. In fact for years Fat Tony reported back to Phillip Lombardo, also known as Ben or Benny Squint. In the 1960's, when Vito Genovese went to jail, he had turned over control of our brugad to Lombardo. Lombardo wanted to stay in the background and keep the heat off himself. So over the years, Tommy Ryan, then Eli Zaccardi, then Funzi Tieri, and finally Fat Tony, fronted as the bosses of the family while Lombardo con- trolled things from the background. In 1981, Fat Tony had a stroke and was "pulled down" by Lom- bardo, Vincent "Chin" Gigante, Manna, and Santora. Lombardo was also in poor health and retired. Senator Nunn. Could I stop you right there, what do you mean by "pulled down"? Mr. Cafaro. In other words, he was not the boss any more. He was taken down. Senator Nunn. It does not mean he was killed, or anything like that, or hurt, or harmed? Mr. Cafaro. No, no. He was just taken down. He was not a boss any longer. Senator Nunn. Thank you. Mr. Cafaro. Gigante became the boss behind the scenes with Santora as the underboss, and Manna as the consigliere. Gigante also allowed Fat Tony to continue to front as the boss, letting the other families believe, as recently as 1984, that Fat Tony still controlled our brugad. Fat Tony continued to represent the family by sitting on the commission and in meeting representatives of the other families. In fact Fat Tony conferred with Chin on any major matters affecting the family. Chin attended one commission meeting but preferred that Fat Tony go to these meetings. I remember the day I became a member of the Genovese family. Tony Salerno had told me and Patty Jerome to meet him and Buckaloo one morning. When we arrived, Buckaloo took me to the El Cortile Restaurant on Mulberry Street, where we met with Funzi Tieri, the brugad's underboss, and Fat Tony, who at that time was the consigliere. I knew what I was there for when I saw a gun, a knife, a pin, alcohol and tissue laying out on the table. Funzi asked me if I wanted to become a member of the family. He said I could accept or not accept, and there would be no hard feelings. But he also said "once you accept you belong to us. We come first. Your family and home come second. We come first, no matter what." And I accepted. Funzi then showed me the gun and the knife, and says "This is the gun and the knife, you live with the gun and die by the knife." He told me that Fat Tony had sponsored me, and gave me a piece of paper to let burn in my hand while I took the oath. "If I betray the Cosa Nostra, I shall burn like this paper". He then pricked my trigger finger with the pin and told me, "Now you are amico nostra, you have been born over again. Now you are a man; you belong to us." From that point on, I was amico nostra, a soldier in the Geno- vese family, the most powerful mob family or "brugad" in New York City, and, for that matter, in the United States. There were certain rules that all amico nostra lived by: no fool- ing around with another amico nostra's wife; no "junk"; no dealing with pornography or Government bonds; and never talking about "this thing' to anyone but another amico nostra. Senator Roth. Would you explain what you mean by "no junk.** Mr. Cafaro. It is narcotics. Senator Roth. Narcotics. Thank you. Mr. Cafaro. We were a very disciplined organization. A soldier had to check in at least once a week with his caporegime. A soldier could not make a "score," meaning any illegal business, without the approval of his capo. If he wanted to, a caporegime could demand 10 percent of the profits made by his soldiers on a score. A soldier could not even carry a gun without first getting approval from his capo. Most important, we knew never to ask questions about another amico nostra's business unless it was also our business. La Cosa Nostra enforces its rules through murder. So we even have rules about who could or could not be murdered, or, as we say on the streets—clipped, whacked or hurt. First of all, killings were mandatory for certain offenses. Messing around with another amico nostra's wife or family; dealing in "junk"; "ratting"; refusing to go on a hit if asked; knowingly killing a cop or other law-en- forcement agent. Also, if someone you sponsored "ratted", you would be killed as being responsible for his actions. No killing or "hit" could take place without the approval of the hierarchy of your family. The first step in getting that approval was to take your "beef to your capo, who in turn gets approval for the hit from the consiglieri and the underboss. Ultimately, no hit could go down without the approval of the boss. If the boss okays the hit, the capo assigns it to you to be carried out. You decide who, if anyone, from your own regime, will help you do the job. If the hit is against a member of another family, your boss will take the beef to the boss of that family. If he agrees, members of that family will carry out the hit. If he disagrees, and the hit takes place anyway, a "war" may result. As for me, I was never asked to carry out a hit. I never had to kill anyone. This was because Fat Tony always looked out for me. It was like a father and son relationship. However, I knew that if I was ever asked, I would have to kill or be killed. What I did for our family was to run the numbers business in West Harlem from about 110th Street to 153rd Street. I had about 72 controllers working under me. We had plenty of willing custom- ers. We paid 6 to 1. The New York lottery only paid 5 to 1. At my peak I was grossing about $80,000 per day with a net of about $65,000 before payouts. I had some bad years, but in a good year I could make as much as $2 million or more. Whatever money I took, I split 50-50 with Fat Tony. Later I expanded my business from numbers into sports betting. My family made a lot of money from gambling and the numbers rackets. We got our money from gambling but our real power, our real strength came from the unions. With the unions behind us, we could shut down the city, or the country for that matter, if we needed to, to get our way. Our brugad controlled a number of different unions, some of which I personally dealt with, some of which I knew about from other amico nostras. In some cases we got money from our dealings with the unions, in some cases we got favors such as jobs for friends and relatives, but more importantly, in all cases we got power over every businessman in New York. With the unions behind us, we could make or break the construc- tion industry, the garment business, the docks, to name but a few. For example, Bobby Rao—Robert Rao—was a union official with a local of Hotel Workers and Bartenders Union, Hotel, Restaurant Employees, AFL-CIO Production, Service and Sales District Coun- cil. Bobby and his union belonged to our brugad. Every month, Bobby would bring over anywhere from a $1,000 to $2,000 for me to give to Fat Tony, which I would split with Fat Tony. At Christmas, Bobby would bring over $25,000 for me to give to Fat Tony. Fat Tony would tell me how to split the money up—half, or $12,500 to Ben Lombardo who, at the time, was the boss of our family behind Tony; another $6,500 to Tony Provenzano, or Tony "Pro," a family member who controlled Teamsteis Local 560; and the remainder to be split between Fat Tony and myself. I knew that the money that Bobby Rao delivered was money that was skimmed from union funds, including union dental and medi- cal plans. I knew this because Bobby himself told me so. Although our brugad probably had the greatest amount of union influence in New York City, the other families also had control of unions in certain areas and industries. As a result, some of the most important industries in New York City, such as the waterfront and shipping industries, construction and concrete industries, the garment center, and the convention center operations, were all subject to mob influence and control. Another major source of our power and income for our brugad was the mob's control of the concrete industry through what we called the "2 percent club." Fat Tony and Paul Castellano were partners with Nicky Auletta in S&A Concrete. Salerno and Castellano had put up no money, but had provided Auletta with their control and influence of the construction unions. Through S&A Concrete, the Genovese and Gambino families also took over the high-rise construction business of DIG Concrete and Construction. Castellano also controlled "Biff" Halloran, the owner of Transit Mix and Certified Concrete. Castellano could control Halloran and others like him because Castellano controlled Local 282 of the Teamsters Union. All of the concrete drivers belonged to that Local 282. For a while, only Halloran was allowed to deliver concrete to construction sites in Manhattan. Fat Tony and Castellano used their influence to insure that contractors bought all of their con- crete from Halloran. In return, for every sale arranged by Fat Tony and Castellano, they got back from Halloran $1 per yard of concrete poured. During the same time, "Junior" Persico, the boss of the Colombo brugad and "Tony Ducks" Corallo, the boss of the Lucchese brugad, raised a "beef about Halloran being the only one allowed to deliv- er concrete in Manhattan. Both of them had connections with concrete plants and wanted to get a piece of Manhattan. Persico gets $3 to $4 a yard from Fer- rara Brothers, Ozone Park, Queens, New York, for concrete sales obtained for them by Junior. Fat Tony and Castellano told them that Halloran was with them, and given the strength of their fami- lies, were able to keep Persico and Corallo out of Manhattan. This worked well until a "beef arose between Castellano and ^alloran regarding payment for some damaged trucks. As a result of that dispute, Halloran stopped payments to Fat Tony and Castel- lano, and other concrete companies were allowed into Manhattan. To control the award of contracts, Vinnie DiNapoli came up with a plan for the "2 percent Club" consisting of high-rise concrete con- struction contractors. The Genovese, Gambino, Lucchese and Colombo brugads ran the club. Each family had a "made" guy who knew the construction business as its representative on the club. These individuals ran the club, but any "beefs" were settled by the bosses of the families. The club members split up all of the jobs over $2 million. S&A Concrete got all the jobs over $5 million. After a while, the smaller contractors who were not members of the club started beefing be- cause there were not enough jobs under $2 million to go around, and eventually, the $2 million rule was raised to $3 million. Any- thing over $5 million still went to S&A concrete. A club contractor that was given a job had to pay the club 2 per- cent of the contract price. This 2 percent was split among the four brugads. Senator NUNN. Mr. Cafaro, if I could interrupt you right there, and when you say they control these contracts, and anything over $5 million went to a certain company, anything under $2 million, for a period of time, went to people who were not members of the club, is that right? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. And then you raised that to $3 million? Mr. CAFARO. Three million. Senator NUNN. Now how did they control this? Presumably who- ever is awarding the contract wants a low price. Were they doing it through rigged bids? Mr. CAFARO. Through bid rigging. They would put in a bid of— we say $1.5 million. You would put in your bid for $1.5 million, and me knowing I could get the job, we knew the bids, and I would tell you put in a bid for $1.3 million, and that is how the contractors went along with that. Senator NUNN. In other words, before the bids were put in, there was an agreement among the members of the club— Mr. CAFARO. You put in a bid for $1.5 million, I put in a bid for $1.3 million, and that is how I got the job. Senator NUNN. So you knew who was going to be the low bidder before the bids went in? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, sir. Senator NUNN. How did you restrict outsiders from bidding? Mr. CAFARO. Well, there were so many jobs allocated from the Dodge report. They would get the Dodge report and see how many jobs were coming up in a certain amount of time, and they would start to work on the bids from then. Senator NUNN. Well, you had to make sure nobody that was not a member of the club bid, right? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you made sure that was not done because of the contractors you had. Most of these contractors got all the work anyway, but you made sure you got so many jobs, I got so many jobs, he got so many jobs, and it was done with the bid. Senator NUNN. But you are basically saying there was not any competition? Mr. Cafaro. No, none whatsoever. Senator Nunn. No real competition? Mr. Cafaro. No. Senator Roth. Could I ask one question there, Mr. Chairman. Does that mean all construction on Manhattan was controlled by these measures? Mr. Cafaro. I would not say all of it but 75 percent of it. Senator Roth. Could you estimate what percentage. Mr. Cafaro. I said 75 percent. Senator Roth. 75 percent? Mr. Cafaro. Yes. Senator Roth. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. Senator Nunn. Thank you. Go ahead. Mr. Cafaro. I have reviewed charts of the five New York fami- lies which have been shown to me by the Subcommittee staff. I have identified for the Subcommittee staff many of those individ- uals who I know, either personally or through other amico nostras, including the five current bosses of the New York families: Vincent "Chin" Gigante of the Genovese family; John Gotti of the Gambino family; Victor Amuso of the Lucchese family; Philip Rastelli of the Bonanno family; and Carmine Persico of the Colombo family. Senator Nunn. How many of those have you met personally? How many of those individuals? Let's take them one by one, and tell us whether you know them personally, or through others. Mr. Cafaro. I met—well, Vincente "Chin" Gigante is a boss 1 met. Senator Nunn. You know him personally? Mr. Cafaro. Personally. John Gotti, I met him at MCC. Nevei; knew him until I met him at MCC. Senator Nunn. MCC being? in Mr. Eames. That is the Metropolitan Corrections Center. x Senator Nunn. Right. So you met him personally, too? Mr. Cafaro. Yes. Victor Amuso, "Little Vic," I met him person ally. Philip Rastelli, I don't know him, never met him. Senator Nunn. You know him by reputation but not personally c, Mr. Cafaro. Not personally. And Carmine Junior, I met him pei ;j. sonally. -; ( Senator Nunn. Persico? ^ Mr. Cafaro. Yes. Senator Nunn. Thank you. \,^ Mr. Cafaro. As for our own brugad, "Chin" Gigante is na,^ clearly recognized on the streets as the boss. To the outside work".",' Gigante is known for his sometimes bizarre and crazy behavior. In truth, he is a shrewd and experienced family member, has risen through the ranks from soldier to capo to boss. H JJ strange behavior, suggesting to the outside world that he is craz S: helps to further insulate him from the authorities. In the meantime, his control of the family's activities is as stnH*5 and as calculated as ever. > ^ Senator Nunn. Could you give us an example of his so-call crazy behavior. I* . Mr. Cafaro. Well, walks around with the robe and his pajam; "*■" He ^ Senator Nunn. You mean outside? *)• I Mr. CAFARO. Outside, yes, by the club where he stays. He is always in his robe and his pajamas, and says crazy things. He does crazy things. Senator NUNN. But it is all a guise, you are saying? Mr. CAFARO. From what I hear, yes. Senator NUNN. You are saying he is not crazy? Mr. CAFARO. I do not think so. Senator NUNN. Go ahead. Thank you. Mr. CAFARO. As boss, Gigante ultimately controls any of the fam- ily's deals or scores. He directly controls all numbers operations in the area from Sullivan Street up to 14th Street. He runs the St. Anthony Feast, a street festival held annually in Lower Manhattan. When "Tommy Ryan" was killed, Gigante took the book on his shylock business. Since that time that money has gone to Gigante's crew. I also know that Gigante and John Gotti, as heir to Paul Castel- lano, and current boss of the Gambino family, both pushed Nick Auletta for a cut of the profits from the sale of the Bankers and Brokers Building, as a result of promises supposedly made to Fat Tony and Paul Castellano when Auletta first bought the building. Gotti was seeking the money from Auletta because as the new Gambino boss, he would be entitled to all the business and money that used to go to Castellano. For example, I remember Gotti asking me if I knew how much money Castellano had been getting kicked back every month from Scoissa Concrete Company. I did not know but I told Gotti he should contact Funzi Mosca, who, as the Gambino representative in the "Concrete Club," would be able to give him the answer. Thank you. That concludes my statement. I will be glad to answer any questions you may have. Senator NUNN. Thank you very much, Mr. Cafaro. Senator Roth and I have a number of questions. And again, take your time. We are not in any hurry this morning. The first question I have, you have used several terms that may not be clear during your testimony. What do you mean by the term, for instance, of amico nostra? Mr. CAFARO. Amico nostra is a wiseguy, a made member. Senator NUNN. I have not heard that term before. What is the difference in that and just being a member of the LCN or a made man? Is that the same thing? Mr. CAFARO. Well, amico nostra, that is the term I use. Amico nostra. But you could say, friend of ours. Senator NUNN. Friend of ours? Mr. CAFARO. When you are making an introduction of a amico nostra to meet another amico nostra. Senator NUNN. Is that your term uniquely, or do others use that term, too? Mr. CAFARO. A lot of people do not use those terms. They use "friend of ours." Senator NUNN. Why do you use amico nostra? Mr. CAFARO. I am not going to go through that story now. Well, at one time I was drinking at a restaurant in a bar. And two friends of mine walked in, and we were having a few drinks or whatever, talking about everyday things. And I told this amico nostra who was a friend, meet a friend of ours. I do not know if I said friend of ours or friend of mine. Senator Nunn. You were talking to someone who was a member of the family about someone— Mr. Cafaro. Who wasn't a member of the family. Senator Nunn. About somebody who was not? Mr. Cafaro. To this amico nostra, who was a member, I must have said, meet a friend of ours, whatever his name, Jerry or what- ever. So he took it upon himself to think that he was amico nostra. So the next day or a couple of days later, or a week later, they were introducing him as amico nostra, which he was not. So he come up to see me about a week later, he says, Vince, you told me that so-and-so is a friend. I says, no, I never said he was a friend. But you introduced me. If I introduced you as a friend of ours or a friend, I says, I do not know; what is the problem? He says, well, everybody is going—I introduced him, and every- body thinks he is a friend of ours. And I say no, he was never straightened out. I did not interpret it that way. And he said, well, he said, I already did it. So I says to him, I says—he says, you got a problem? I says, no, I says I will see Tony, and I will discuss it with Tony. But meanwhile, the kid who was supposed to be straightened out, says, gee, I got straightened out and I didn't even know about it. And that was it. That is why—some oldtimer grabbed me, told me, say amico nostra, that's a word that was from Portuguese, the wiseguys over there used to use the word amico nostra, so that the agents or the cops couldn't infiltrate. They would ask you what's the word, and you had to say, amico nostra. And that's where it come from. So I used to say amico nostra after that. Senator Nunn. So you quit introducing people as a friend of ours, and started using that term? Mr. Cafaro. I started using amico nostra. Senator Nunn. What does the term, brugad, mean? Mr. Cafaro. That's the family. That's your family. Senator Nunn. That is the family? Mr. Cafaro. That all consisted of amico nostras, is the family. Senator Nunn. Where did that term come from? Is that used commonly by a lot of people? Or is that just your term? Mr. Cafaro. That is the way I use it. Same fellow I was telling you about, amico nostra, he is dead now. Senator Nunn. You also refer in your affidavit to beefs and sit- downs. Tell us what a beef is and what a sitdown is? Mr. Cafaro. A beef is when you can have it within your family or another family with amico nostra; that's a sitdown. You have a dispute about something. It could be about a union; it could be about numbers; it could be anything. That's what a beef means to us. Senator Nunn. In other words, a beef is a problem, and a sit- down is a negotiation? Mr. Cafaro. Well, the—it is the same thing. A sitdown, who says a sitdown, who says a beef, it is the same thing. Senator NUNN. A beef and a sitdown are the same thing? Mr. CAFARO. Same thing. Senator NUNN. So a beef is an effort to solve a problem? Mr. CAFARO. Both are. A beef or a sitdown is the same thing, to solve a problem. Senator NUNN. Have you taken part in sitdowns? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Do sitdowns normally occur between people on the same level? In other words, soldiers, or capos, or bosses? Is there a mixed group? Mr. CAFARO. Well, usually, if there is a beef soldier to soldier, it is you and the soldier, amico nostras. Or if there is, say, somebody around me that is not amico nostra, he gets into a problem with another fellow around another amico nostra, you let them try and straighten it out. If they cannot, then we sit down for them. But you go according to rank. If you cannot straighten out the beef, I tell him or he tells me, we are going further. Which means going to your captain. Senator NUNN. You have explained something about the way you go about requesting permission to murder someone within the family. Were you ever present when this type of approval for a murder was requested? Mr. CAFARO. Requested by the boss? Senator NUNN. Requested by anyone. In other words, were you ever present when a member of the family asked the hierarchy for permission to murder someone? Mr. CAFARO. You have got to go through your captain, if you are a soldier. You go through your captain. And you give him the reason why. I was there one time when this Philly—what is his name?—this Philly Buono had come down, he is amico nostra with us in our regime, and he was looking for an okay with this Nat Masselli. Senator NUNN. Who was Nat Masselli? Was he a member of the family? Mr. CAFARO. No. Not that I know of. I do not know him. I just know the name. Senator NUNN. He was outside the family then? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, yes. He come down with a piece of paper, about as big as this. And I was standing on the corner on 116th Street with Sammy Santora. Senator NUNN. In New York City? Mr. CAFARO. In New York City, yes. And he come down, he pulled this paper out of his pocket, and he showed it to Sammy. Senator NUNN. Sammy was who? Mr. CAFARO. He was the underboss in our brugad at the time. Senator NUNN. Santora? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. And he showed him the paper. Sammy read it, he said, well, could this hurt you? He says, yeah, I did a few things with this kid. And the kid was supposed to be a rat. So Sammy says, all right, I'll get back to you tomorrow. So I says to Sammy, what are you going to do? He said, I am going to go down and see the skinny guy and the "Chin". Senator NUNN. Who was the skinny guy? Mr. CAFARO. That is what I interpret as Bobby Manna. Senator NUNN. Who was Bobby Manna? Mr. CAFARO. Bobby Manna is the consigliere in our brugad. Senator NUNN. Of the family? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. And who was the "Chin"? Mr. CAFARO. The boss of the family. Senator NUNN. And tell us the name of the boss. Mr. CAFARO. Oh, "Chin" Gigante, Vincent Gigante. Senator NUNN. So the "Chin" was Gigante? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Go ahead. Mr. CAFARO. And he went down and supposedly seen him that day or that night. And I had seen Sammy the next day or a day later, whatever it was, and I asked him, I said, how did you do? He says, yeah, I got the okay for Philly. He says, in fact I got to go see Philly and tell him it is okay to do what he wants. And that was the situation. Senator NUNN. What happened? Mr. CAFARO. I do not know if it was a week later or two weeks later, whatever, the kid was found killed in his car in the Bronx. Senator NUNN. The kid being Nat Masselli? Mr. CAFARO. Nat Masselli, right. Senator NUNN. The one the request was made on? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Was anyone ever tried for that murder or hit? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, they were convicted, this Philly Buono and Sal Odierno. Senator NUNN. Was anyone else involved in the actual murder? Mr. CAFARO. Well, not that I know of, Senator. Senator NUNN. So they were actually arrested, tried and convict- ed? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Do you know how that murder was carried out? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. Was it by gun, or do you know? Mr. CAFARO. Well, according to what the newspapers say, he was killed in a car. Senator NUNN. Were you present during conversations regarding the disappearance of Teddy Maritas? Mr. CAFARO. Well, there was one conversation. I was standing on the corner on 115th Street and First Avenue. Senator NUNN. That is again in New York City? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. I was talking to some people. And Vinny DiNa- poli asked me—he wanted to ask me something. Senator NUNN. Who is that? Mr. CAFARO. Vinny DiNapoli. He is amico nostra with us, with our regime. He says, I am a little worried about this Teddy Mari- tas. I say, what do you mean, what? He said, I am a little scared about him. He was standing trial then on some concrete case, something, I do not know what about. I says, so what are you telling me for? Go discuss it with Sammy, Sammy Santora. And that was the extent of it. Senator NUNN. Do you know whether he did discuss it with Sammy later? Mr. CAFARO. I do not know, Senator. I never spoke about it any more. Senator NUNN. What happened to Maritas? Mr. CAFARO. Well, according to the newspapers, he was missing. Senator NUNN. How much later after that conversation? Mr. CAFARO. I could not tell you offhand. Senator NUNN. Several months, or within a year? Mr. CAFARO. Could have been several months, several weeks. Senator NUNN. Do you know, or do you have any way of know- ing, or do you have any belief, about who was responsible for his disappearance? Mr. CAFARO. I do not know. For him to ask something like that, I would say Senator NUNN. You would just be guessing, would you not? You do not really know? Mr. CAFARO. I do not know. Senator NUNN. Well, let us leave that one off. Was anyone ever convicted in connection with Maritas' disappearance? Mr. CAFARO. No, Senator. Senator NUNN. Do you have any knowledge regarding the murder of Tony Bananas? I believe the formal name is Antonio Ca- po nigro. Mr. CAFARO. Well, when the old man Bruno got killed in Phila- delphia. Senator NUNN. That is Angelo Bruno? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. And he had got killed, he was the boss of the Philadelphia mob. And there was supposed to have been a power struggle there between this fellow, Chicken, he was the underboss there, and this Tony Bananas. Senator NUNN. Chicken was Phillip Testa, wasn't it? Mr. CAFARO. Philly Testa, right. He had come up to New York at one time to see Tony. And who was there was Tony "Ducks", Tom "Mix" Senator NUNN. Is Tony "Ducks" Corallo? Mr. CAFARO. He is the boss of the Luchese family, Tony "Ducks" Corallo. Tom "Mix" Santora was the underboss. Senator NUNN. Who was Tom "Mix"? Mr. CAFARO. He was the underboss of the Luchese family. Senator NUNN. That is his nickname. What is his Mr. CAFARO. Santoro. And Paul Castellano was there and Fat Tony. And this Chicken went and seen them. So when I seen Tony later on, after they had their meeting in the club, he said that there was a power struggle between Philly Testa and Tony Ba- nanas Caponigro, and that there was a power struggle. And then after that, a couple of hours after that, this Tony Ba- nanas come to discuss it with Tony, and there was present Tony Ducks Corallo of the Luchese mob; Tom Mix Santora, the under- boss of the Luchese mob; and Paul Castellano, and Fat Tony. And whatever they discussed, I do not know. But about a week later this Philly Testa come back. So Tony introduced me to him as the underboss of the Philadelphia mob. So he says to Tony that he thinks Tony Bananas was guilty of the murder of Angelo Bruno. And that was the extent to that. Then about a week after that, Tony Bananas come up or 2 weeks after, he wanted to discuss something with Tony, and we were walking. And Tony said, I do not want to get involved. I do not want to hear about it. Go see Chin. Senator NUNN. Who was he telling that to? Mr. CAFARO. Tony Bananas. And that was the extent of that part of the conversation. Then about a couple of weeks later, I do not remember the weeks, Tony Bananas had to go to 47th or 48th Street in the dia- mond center to meet Baldy Dom Cantarino, he is a caporegime in our brugad. And he had to meet Baldy Dom, whatever his name is. I cannot say the last name, and he had to meet him there between, I do not know, 47th or 48th Street in the diamond exchange. And then that day or a couple of days later, they were found in the Bronx dead; Tony Bananas. Senator NUNN. I did not hear that last part? Mr. CAFARO. I says, Tony Bananas, a couple of days later or next day or two, 3 days later, was found in the Bronx dead. Senator NUNN. You believe there was a direct connection be- tween those conversations and his murder, then? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Do you have any way of knowing who carried out the hit? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. So you do not know who carried it out? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. I am puzzled by the connection between the Philadelphia family and the New York family. Why was the New York family, your family, concerned about the murder of Bruno in Philadelphia? Mr. CAFARO. It was not only our family. It was Paul Castellan there, Tony Ducks Corallo was there, and Tom Mix. Senator NUNN. So there were three families? Mr. CAFARO. Three families there. Senator NUNN. Three New York families concerning the murder Mr. CAFARO. The killing of Angelo Bruno, being that he was a boss of another brugad. And usually it is not done that way, to kill a boss, without discussing it. So there is where the power play must have come in. Senator NUNN. In other words, Bruno had been killed in Phila- delphia Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN [continuing]. And he had been killed obviously without a discussion among the other top mob leaders Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN [continuing]. In the country, or at least in New- York? Mr. CAFARO. At least in New York or whatever. It was never dis- cussed. Senator NUNN. So they felt it was not within the overall protocol or the rules of the mob? Mr. CAFARO. It wasn't in the rules; no, it wasn't in the rules. Senator NUNN. To kill the boss without discussing it with other bosses? Mr. CAFARO. Without discussing any reasoning or whatever. Senator NUNN. Did they feel that they themselves might be in jeopardy if that protocol broke down, if they didn't enforce it? Mr. CAFARO. I would say yes. I would say yes. Senator NUNN. So it was something that offended them pretty seriously? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator, I would say. Senator NUNN. Did Tony talk to you about this? Did he go into any detail? Mr. CAFARO. Well, no, after this killing with Tony Bananas, the following week, he says, I am glad I sent him down to Chin; I did not get involved with this. Senator NUNN. Why was he glad he did not get involved? Mr. CAFARO. Well, my interpretation I guess is that because of the killing. Senator NUNN. So he would prefer not to have been involved. Mr. CAFARO. That is a family problem within—let them straight- en out their own problems. Senator NUNN. In other words, he would rather for Chin to be the one to make that decision rather than him? Mr. CAFARO. Either that, or he just did not want to get involved with a family problem from another brugad. Senator NUNN. Did Fat Tony tell you about the killing? Is that the way you found out about it? Mr. CAFARO. No, I read it in the papers. It was in the newspa- pers. Senator NUNN. And did Fat Tony ever tell you who he thought did the—actually carried out the killing? Mr. CAFARO. Well, he had said to me, that is how I know about the appointment on 47th or 48th street in the diamond exchange, that it was an appointment made with Baldy Dom down there. Senator NUNN. Appointment made with? Mr. CAFARO. With Tony Bananas and Baldy Dom. Senator NUNN. Baldy Dom? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, he s a caporegime in our brugad. Senator NUNN. Did Fat Tony tell you that Baldy Dom's crew ac- tually carried out the killing? Mr. CAFARO. No, he did not tell me they carried out the killing. My opinion, I would say yes. Senator NUNN. Your opinion? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. I misunderstood the question. Senator NUNN. I believe in your affidavit, let me read that and see if this is correct, you say, reading, that in April 1980—this is page four, for counsel, page four of the affidavit. I am sorry, page 12 and 13 of the affidavit. Let me read this to you and see where it is in error, if in error, or whether it is accurate if it is accurate. You say, "In April 1980, Tony Bananas' visited Tony Salerno, at the Palma Boys Social Club. After this visit, Tony told me that he had advised "Tony Bananas' to go see "The Chin,' because he did not want to get involved in Philadelphia's problems.
"Snakes... Snakes... I don't know no Snakes."
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
#757920
01/09/14 11:07 PM
01/09/14 11:07 PM
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Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,408
Snakes
OP
Underboss
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OP
Underboss
Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,408
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Fat Tony thought that the matter was a Philadelphia problem, and passed the problem off to The Chin.' At the time, the acting boss was (un- derboss) Funzi Tieri, with Lombardo, the real power behind the scene, and Manna, the consigliere. A short time later 'Tony Ba- nanas' and another guy were found murdered in the Bronx. In mid- April, 1980, Salerno told me, 'It's is a good thing that I did not get involved with this Tony Bananas thing and I sent him to see the Chin. He had an appointment with the Chin, Baldy Dom (Domin- ick) Cantarino picked him up and the other guy, at the Diamond Exchange on 47th Street or 48th Street (New York, New York), and they banged him out.' " Is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Do you have anything to add to that? Are there any deletions? Any changes? Anything in error on that? Mr. CAFARO. Oh, I do not know exactly who carried out the hit, who killed him. But it had to be the regime. Senator NUNN. Right, yes. Was anyone ever convicted of the murder of Tony Bananas? Mr. CAFARO. No, not that I know of. Senator NUNN. Mr. Cafaro, what was your age when you became a made man, or straightened out, became a member of the LCN? Mr. CAFARO. Say, 14 years ago, I was forty or forty-one years old. Senator NUNN. Forty or forty-one years old? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Why did you agree to become a member? Mr. CAFARO. Well, when you were brought up in the neighbor- hood, East Harlem in New York City, you always looked up to the wiseguys, what I mean is amico nostra. And the kid from the streets, and whatever. And to us it's honor, honorable. Senator NUNN. Did you know who the wiseguys were when you were growing up? Mr. CAFARO. I knew some of them; not all of them. Of course then it was more of a secrecy than it is now. Senator NUNN. What do you gain from being a member? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you gain honor, respect; that is what you gain. Honor and respect. Senator NUNN. Honor within the community? Mr. CAFARO. The community and all over the city. Five boroughs, I would say. Senator NUNN. How can an organized group like that that car- ries out all sorts of criminal activity including murder as you've de- scribed here this morning be considered honorable? Mr. CAFARO. Well, in our way of thinking and our way of life, that is what it is to us. Being honorable, and respect. That is the way we are brought up. That is the way you are born and raised in these big Italian neighborhoods. Senator NUNN. What about killing people? Is that considered within the rules of honor? Mr. CAFARO. Well, yes, as far as a lot of guys look to get called to do killings; that's an honor to them. We do not kill innocent people, Senator. In other words, for you to kill somebody, it has to be a rat. He has to maybe fool around with somebody in your family, another amico nostra's wife, or you fool around with junk, or maybe your family got abused by someone. Senator NUNN. In other words, when the rules are broken, you feel that the person that breaks the rule deserves to be murdered? Mr. CAFARO. Oh, when it comes to amico nostra's wife or junk, there is no talking. Senator NUNN. In other words, what about any other rules? Those various Mr. CAFARO. Well, as far as pornography and Government bonds and the lesser things there, they sit down and talk; they warn you. Senator NUNN. In other words, you are not supposed to fool with junk, which is narcotics? Mr. CAFARO. No junk, and amico nostra's wife. Senator NUNN. No other member's wife. Mr. CAFARO. Those are the two, there's no talking about it. Senator NUNN. Those are the top two rules? Mr. CAFARO. That is right. Senator NUNN. You break those rules and you're a dead man? Mr. CAFARO. There is no talking. Senator NUNN. No question about it? Mr. CAFARO. No question about it. Senator NUNN. Now what about—you mentioned Government bonds? Mr. CAFARO. You cannot fool around with Government bonds, pornography, there's a few others. Senator NUNN. Why Government bonds? What's Mr. CAFARO. They do not want to get involved too much with, I guess with the Government, with the bonds and the securities there or something like that. Senator NUNN. They believe that would be more rigidly enforced by Federal law enforcement? Mr. CAFARO. I don't know. I could not answer that, Senator. I do not know why Government bonds. But we were told not to Senator NUNN. What about pornography? Mr. CAFARO. Pornography, no pornography. Senator NUNN. Why? Mr. CAFARO. Well, because, it is like being a pimp. Senator NUNN. In other words, that is not honorable? Mr. CAFARO. No, not as far as we are concerned. Senator NUNN. So someone fooling around with Government bonds or pornography, is that also, in your words, no talk? In other words, is that Mr. CAFARO. No, that you can sit down and talk about. Senator NUNN. You can talk about those two things? Mr. CAFARO. Those two things you can sit down and Senator NUNN. That is not capital punishment? Mr. CAFARO. No, no. Senator NUNN. But fooling around with someone's wife who is a member of the organization Mr. CAFARO. Or junk. Senator NUNN [continuing]. Or junk, is? Mr. CAFARO. That's—there's no talking then. Senator NUNN. How do you explain so many people being con- victed within the families of narcotics charges? Mr. CAFARO. How do you explain it? How would I explain it? Senator NUNN. Yes. In other words, you are saying that it was against the rules for members to fool with narcotics. And yet time after time it appears that they are Mr. CAFARO. If I got pinched for junk, I would want to stay in jail; I wouldn't want to come out on bail. Senator NUNN. In other words, if your family found out that you had been convicted of junk, you were a marked man? Mr. CAFARO. That's right. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. When you say you never kill innocent people, now you mentioned a minute ago a fellow named, I believe it was Nat Masselli Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN [continuing]. You said he was not a member o the family? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. How do you define innocent? Mr. CAFARO. Well, according to—he was supposed to have rattec on this Philly about something; I don't know what. Senator NUNN. So if you rat on someone, even if you are not member of the family, you are fair game? Mr. CAFARO. Fair game. Senator NUNN. So the killings are not confined simply to family members? Mr. CAFARO. No. If you are ratting, you rat on me, you are fair game. Like me, I am fair game. Senator NUNN. You are fair game now? Mr. CAFARO. Oh, yes, no question about it. Senator NUNN. So if you were to get out on the streets now, you think you'd be a marked man? Mr. CAFARO. Think? I know. Senator NUNN. You know you would be? Mr. CAFARO. Sure. Senator NUNN. Let me ask one other question before deferring to Senator Roth, we've heard a lot about the International Longshore- men's Association. We had a whole series of Federal investigations on the waterfront back in, I believe it was, the late 1970's. Do you know about those investigations, the so-called Unirac in vestigations? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. You are not familiar with them? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. What about right now, as far as you know, is the Genovese family still in control of the International Longshore- men's Association in the ports of New York? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. You know that for a fact? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Personal knowledge? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Who controls it for the family? Who controls this for the family? Mr. CAFARO. Dougie Rago. He's amico nostra with our brugad. He's a union official there. He's been there for years. Senator NUNN. He's a union official but also a made man? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Do you know that personally? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. How? Mr. CAFARO. I was introduced to him. He was in my regime. Senator NUNN. Part of your regime? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. You dealt with him? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Go ahead and tell us about that; as much as you know about it. Mr. CAFARO. About what? Senator NUNN. About Rago and his Mr. CAFARO. Well, he's—like I say, he is a union official with the ILA, and he's amico nostra with us. How long he is amico nostra, I do not know. But I was introduced to him as amico nostra. And he has been under the longshoremen—well, I call it the longshoremen—with the ILA for years. And I had a conversation one day with Sammy Santora, and I was not aware of how much money was taken down at the ILA, via union officials. And Sammy happened to mention to me one day that they were taking down $400,000 to $500,000 a year. I says, you are kidding? He says, no, that's what Bougie is pulling down, $400,000 to $500,000 a year. And that was the extent of it. Senator NUNN [continuing]. You say $400,000 or $500,000 a year. That money was coming to Doug Rago from Mr. CAFARO. According to Sammy, what he told me, yes. Senator NUNN [continuing]. From union activities? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. Was Rago keeping the money or sharing it with the family? Mr. CAFARO. I don't know what he was doing, Senator. Senator NUNN. Was there ever a period of time when Rago wanted to retire? Mr. CAFARO. Not that I can recall. He was never around anyway. He lives in Florida, I think. Senator NUNN. Senator Roth. Senator ROTH. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. In a very real sense, an LCN is really a subgovernment, is it not? Once you become a member of a family, you disregard local law, but you are bound by the rules of this subgovernment; would that be a correct interpretation? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator ROTH. It is considered above and beyond what we ordi- narily call the law—is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator ROTH. Now, I would like to go back to this question of the unions. You say that organized crime still controls the docks; is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. The what, Senator? Senator ROTH. That the union still controls the Brooklyn docks? Mr. CAFARO. Well, both, New York and Brooklyn. Senator ROTH. New York and Brooklyn? The past investigations and prosecutions have in no way diminished the LCN control of the docks? Mr. CAFARO. No, Senator. Senator ROTH. What other unions does the Genovese family con- trol? Mr. CAFARO. Local 560 Teamsters. Senator ROTH. Local 560? What union is that? Mr. CAFARO. That's the Teamsters. 272, that's the garage union. What other ones? The Javits Center in New York. The carpenters and the expos. Bobby Rao's union, I do not know what local that is. That is hotel and restaurant workers. And there are all these other small unions, ambulance drivers. Senator ROTH. How does the LCN get control of a union? How does it maintain control? Mr. CAFARO. You mean the strength? I would say the shop stew- ard is the strength there. He controls the workers. And when you send people down for jobs, you send them to the shop steward. Usu- ally the amico nostra knows the shop steward. And you send him down, working guys to go to work. And it straightens up the position of the union delegate. Senator ROTH. Now, the shop steward is the one who decides who works; is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. Well, he's—he hires and fires. Senator ROTH. He hires and fires? Mr. CAFARO. Right. He's the strength. When it comes to voting time for the union official, he puts in who he wants. He tells his men, vote for so-and-so. So that's where the strength. Senator ROTH. How does the LCN control the shop stewards? Are they members of the family? Mr. CAFARO. No. They are just working guys, shop steward. But they are controlled by the amico nostras, the wiseguys, whatever you want to call them. Senator ROTH. Well, I am not clear. How does a wiseguy control the steward? By fear? By payoff? Or what? Mr. CAFARO. No, none of that. It's his position. He got a job. Now he knows what we say through the union delegate, with the shop steward there, he's the strength to delegate as far as putting him there. Usually he goes to the union guy when there's a problem. When we need a favor, we—and they know who the wiseguy is, involved, the shop stewards. Senator ROTH. When you say shop steward, does that mean all of them are dominated by the LCN? Mr. CAFARO. I don't say all of them, Senator. I do not say all of them. Senator ROTH. A majority? Mr. CAFARO. A majority, yes. You had asked me where the strength is, and I says, with the shop stewards. Senator ROTH. Now, how does an LCN family use its control of a union? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you can use it in any way you want. You want to pull a strike. Or maybe the union guy is not getting enough money, the officials or whatever. Sweetheart contracts. However you want to use the union, you can use it. Senator ROTH. Can you use it for kickbacks? Mr. CAFARO. Oh, sure. Senator ROTH. I want to emphasize something the Chairman said a few minutes ago, because it is absolutely right. By far and away the majority of unions represent workers in an honorable way, so we are talking about the exception and not the general rule. Now, you stated LCN families have substantial influence in the convention center's operation in New York City through their con- trol of certain unions. How do LCN families exercise influence through the convention center's operation? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you got the locals. There's the carpenters, electricians, the platform where they pull up with the trucks to unload, whatever. There are all different locals there. And most, I would say at least half the locals in the city is run by wiseguys. Carpenters, laborers, expos; so that is all wiseguys in- volved. Senator ROTH. Now, earlier in your testimony, you said, if I un- derstood correctly, that something like 75 percent of construction in New York City was controlled or influenced Mr. CAFARO. By the wiseguys. Senator ROTH [continuing]. By the LCN; is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, yes. Senator NUNN. May I ask a question on that, because I was not clear a little while ago on that. We were talking about the concrete industry now when we were talking about that. Are you talking about overall construction, or the concrete part of it? Mr. CAFARO. I would say the concrete part of it. And I would say 50 percent of the overall is controlled by Senator NUNN. But 75 percent of the concrete? Mr. CAFARO. Concrete, yes. Senator NUNN. And that is in New York City? Mr. CAFARO. New York City. Senator ROTH. And you say 50 percent of the construction? Mr. CAFARO. I would say of the construction. Senator ROTH. So that means that 50 percent of the buildings constructed in New York are in one way or another Mr. CAFARO. Affiliated with wiseguys, the contractors. Senator ROTH. Are what by the wiseguys? Mr. CAFARO. The contractors are affiliated with wiseguys. Senator ROTH. Affiliated with wiseguys. Now, I am not exactly clear how they use their influence in this area. You mentioned, for example, that when the contracts are let, they know what the price would be. Mr. CAFARO. They know the bids. Senator ROTH. They know the bids? Mr. CAFARO. Right. Senator ROTH. Now, how does that work out in a private con- tract? Let us say I am a businessman and want to build a building. So what do I do? I go and get a general contractor? Mr. CAFARO. You want to build a building? Senator ROTH. Yes. Mr. CAFARO. Yes, you get a general—GC, they call them. And he told you I guess how much it is going to cost you for the building to go up with everything involved. Senator ROTH. Is he the one that lets the contracts? Mr. CAFARO. The GC? No. I am sure the owner. Senator ROTH. It is the owner that does it. Mr. CAFARO. He is the one. Whoever works for Senator ROTH. Why would the owner cooperate? Mr. CAFARO. It is not that he is cooperating. Whoever is giving out the bids that works for the owner that wants to build the build- ing, whoever works with him for the bids, receives the bids. Senator ROTH. Would that be an employee of the owner? Mr. CAFARO. I would say, yes, sure. And he would tell certain contractors what the lowest bid is. Senator ROTH. He would, as a general rule, he would tell Mr. CAFARO. Well, I do not know about a general rule. But cer- tain contractors he would tell. Senator ROTH. And he is the one who lets them know what the Mr. CAFARO. What the lowest bid is. Senator ROTH. So somebody else can come in and bid lower? Mr. CAFARO. Right. Senator ROTH. Are you saying then it takes the owners as well as the general contractor to control these bids? Mr. CAFARO. The owner does not control the bid. In a sense he does, but the bid is given out to one of his employees. He gives out the bids. The contractor, whatever. And when he gets into bids, he knows what is the lowest bid. So now as we say, a contractor with a wiseguy that he is friendly with. And he tells him, this is our bid, the lowest bid we got. And he will go in with a lower bid. Where you would not know the bid. Senator NUNN. Let me ask a followup on that. In other words, Senator Roth owns a lot and he wants to build a building on it in New York City, and the bids come in, and they're rigged bids. Senator ROTH. Are they rigged at that stage? Senator NUNN. They are rigged, in other words, the people doing the bidding are conspiring Mr. CAFARO. It is already rigged. Senator NUNN. All right, does the owner know about it in most cases or some cases? Mr. CAFARO. Well, that I do not know, Senator. That I do not know. The bids are already rigged when they go in. Senator ROTH. Is it rigged when the bids go in? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, the Two-Percent Club knows all the jobs. So now naturally four or five contractors start to put in bids, and sometimes Senator ROTH. So it is through the general contractors that the LCN exerts its influence? Mr. CAFARO. I would say yes. The legitimate guy has not got a chance when them bids go in. Senator ROTH. And you said approximately 50 percent of con- struction in New York City is handled in this manner? Mr. CAFARO. Sure, I would say. Senator ROTH. Let me ask you this. You have mentioned a number of unions, but what businesses are controlled or dominated by the LCN? Could you name them? Mr. CAFARO. Legitimate businesses? Senator ROTH. Legitimate businesses. Mr. CAFARO. Well, I would say garbage. Senator ROTH. Garbage. Mr. CAFARO. Private carting. Senator ROTH. As a general rule, those that handle garbage are controlled, influenced, by the LCN families? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, I would say Senator ROTH. Genovese family? Mr. CAFARO. Genovese, all the families. Senator ROTH. Do you know that from personal knowledge? Mr. CAFARO. Well, sure. Senator ROTH. What are the names of the companies? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I know—I do not know the names of the com- panies, but I know a few guys that are in the garbage business. Senator ROTH. Who are they? Mr. CAFARO. Matty "the Horse" lanello. He's a caporegime with us. He's in it. Tommy Mallo from the Bronx, they are in it. But mostly that is controlled by the mob. Senator ROTH. What other legitimate businesses are con- trolled Mr. CAFARO. Have they got? Senator ROTH. What? Mr. CAFARO. Have the wiseguys got? Senator ROTH. Yes. Mr. CAFARO. Trucking business. Senator ROTH. The trucking business? Mr. CAFARO. I would say trucking business. Senator ROTH. Can you name any specific businesses? Mr. CAFARO. No. No. Senator ROTH. What other businesses? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I would say mainly garbage and trucking; that is what I would say. Senator ROTH. The LCN apparently has a prohibition against trafficking in junk, or drugs. If so, why do we see so many mem- bers of the LCN being prosecuted for drug trafficking? Is there a change in the practices of the family? Are the younger members of the LCN more inclined to be involved in drugs than the older? Mr. CAFARO. No, my opinion, I would not say that. I say the money. The money is great. You can become rich overnight. That is what I would say. Whether you are young, old, whatever; the money. Senator ROTH. Is drug trafficking in New York City controlled in any large percentage by organized crime, despite its prohibition? Mr. CAFARO. Senator, I cannot speak for other families. But I can speak for my—well, it was my family. I can speak for the Genovese family. No way in hell they would fool around with junk. There might be sneakers; but as far as I know, none. Senator ROTH. To your knowledge members of your family Mr. CAFARO. No. There might be sneakers; there might be guys that are. Senator ROTH. What about the other families? What about the Bonanno family? Mr. CAFARO. Well, we were told at one time, years back, not to get involved with the Bonanno mob, because first of all they're in the junk business—most of them were—and there is no organiza- tion there. There is no—1 week it is a boss; next week it is some- body else. So we could not get involved with them, mainly for the junk. They are disorganized. Senator ROTH. Do you know if and how the LCN launders money? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I guess through legitimate business people, they would launder their money. I know I did one time with Roy Cohn, a $200,000 gambling check, I laundered a check through him. Senator ROTH. How did you do that? Mr. CAFARO. Well, the fellow that owed me the money, he owed me $200,000, he was a client of Roy Cohn's. So I said, make out a check to Roy Cohn for $200,000, and I will get the money from him. That is how I laundered it. Senator ROTH. Did you ever get the money? Mr. CAFARO. $50,000. Senator ROTH. Out of how much? Mr. CAFARO. Out of $200,000. Senator ROTH. So he still owes you $150,000? Mr. CAFARO. What, am I going to go on his grave and get it? Senator ROTH. It is my understanding that some of the have their own private armies aside from their families. Is that true? Mr. CAFARO. That was the days of Carlo Gambino. He had the Cordeleones from Italy. He had a private mob which—no boss is supposed to have a private mob. So when he died, Paul inherited the Cordeleones from Sicily. And he had a private mob. Senator ROTH. Was the private mob to protect himself from his own family, if necessary? Mr. CAFARO. I would say yes. For his own—that nobody knows, a hidden mob, you called it. I would say yes. Senator ROTH. Now, you talked about some fairly substantial sums being taken by the LCN. Is there any effort on the part of the LCN to take that money, launder it, and buy into legitimate busi- nesses? I am not talking now about the garbage or the trucking indus- tries. Mr. CAFARO. I would say yes. I would say they are going through legitimate businesses. Senator ROTH. In any significant way? How much would you say your family has invested in legitimate businesses? Do you have anv idea? Mr. CAFARO. Oh, gee, I do not know, Senator. I really could not tell you that. I could not answer that. Senator ROTH. Do you know what any of these businesses would be? Mr. CAFARO. Well, like I says, mainly it was trucking and gar- bage. But if it is a legitimate business, they look to go into legiti- mate business. And anything that is flourishable, or they can make money with, they would go into business. Bakery, anything, as long as it is legitimate and they can make money with it. Any business. There are no exceptions. Senator ROTH. Mr. Cafaro, could you briefly explain the purpose of the Two-Percent Club, how it worked and who the members were? Mr. CAFARO. Well, members as far as who? Contractors? Senator ROTH. Yes. Mr. CAFARO. Or wiseguys? Senator ROTH. Both. Mr. CAFARO. Well, the Two-Percent was created about, I do not know, 5 or 6 years ago, when Vinnie DiNapoli had put it together. This way it don't create a problem among contractors. Whoever had contractors with them, they would not go in and put in a bid to take a job away from you, they would underbid you. So not to create a problem, to keep the peace, the circle was formed, the Two-Percent circle with the contractors. So everybody would get so many jobs, and keep everything going good. And who represented—there were a load of contractors who were in it. I cannot remember all the names offhand. Senator ROTH. Can you name some of them? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you had S&A Concrete; that is Nick Auletta. You had G&G. XLO. Cedar Park. Century Maxim. Glenwood. Tech- nical. North Berry. Metro Concrete. You had seven or eight differ- ent contractors; maybe ten. And they would belong to the circle. Senator ROTH. I am sorry, I could not hear. They would what? Mr. CAFARO. And they would belong to the circle, which meant the Two-Percent circle; that is what we called it, the circle. And when the jobs come out, so many jobs, five or six jobs were coming . out, that buildings were going up, they would allocate so many jobs. Over $5 million on the concrete, S&A would get it. Under $5 mil- . lion, another company would get it. And the same thing with the contractors. So many jobs, and so many were given out. And every- body got a piece of the action. Every family's representative there that was there got a job. With the contractors. Or for the contractors. Senator ROTH. Now, in what ways does a wiseguy make money on a construction job? Mr. CAFARO. Well, now, once he gets the job, the contractor, automatically the 2 percent goes into the pot; 2 percent of the job, say $20,000, goes into the pot from all the contractors, and that is split up amongst the four families. Senator ROTH. Split up between them? Mr. CAFARO. It is split up between the families, yes. : Senator ROTH. There have been a number of LCN prosecutions >' recently. Do you think that the families in New York have been damaged by these prosecutions, or do you think they will continue o- to function effectively in the future? Mr. CAFARO. That will go on forever, Senator. s Senator ROTH. As far as you are concerned, there is no way Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator ROTH. Are you aware of the forfeiture of assets on the part of your family to the Federal Government as a result of pros- ecutions? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, there is—I am aware of it. Senator ROTH. Have there been any major forfeitures on the part of your family? Mr. CAFARO. Mine, personally? Senator ROTH. Yes. Mr. CAFARO. Well, they got some levies on my son's property, and my daughter. Senator ROTH. What about the Genovese family in general? Have they been affected by forfeiture of their holdings? Mr. CAFARO. Well, on this case that is going on now, on the Sa- lerno case, there's forfeitures there, on Fat Tony, Vinnie DiNapoli. Louie DiNapoli, Biff Halloran, Nick Auletta, there are forfeitures there. Senator ROTH. You do not see either the prosecutions or these forfeitures in any way really harming the continuity of the Geno- vese family? Mr. CAFARO. None whatsoever. Senator ROTH. If you were a law enforcement official, what would you do or what do you think could be done to try to end their influence? Mr. CAFARO. Cannot end it. You can try to curb it. I do not think you are going to end it. But what you can do is, try to curb it. Senator ROTH. Do you think the younger people coming up are as well disciplined and able to carry on in the same manner as the more senior members? Mr. CAFARO. They are not as disciplined as we are, the oldtimers. They are not as disciplined. I would call them renegades. Senator ROTH. Are they more violent—the LCN boss in Philadel- phia said he was a gangster. Mr. CAFARO. We're all gangsters, Senator. Senator ROTH. They're all gangsters? Mr. CAFARO. We're all gangsters. Senator ROTH. But do you see more violence? Early on you said that no innocent person was murdered by an LCN family. Do you think that is going to continue to be true of the newer breed of gangsters? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I would say, yes, it is all up to the capore- gimes. It is up to them to pull them in and make them understand You got to school them. You got to teach them your way. And when you got a restriction on them, you pull them in. You make them understand. Over here, there is no—you cannot do what you want. You do what we tell you. And they will curb it. They will curb it. You get a few of them that get a little out of line, but they will pull them in. Senator ROTH. So as far as you are concerned, you see the LCN continuing to be as potent in the future? Mr. CAFARO. I would say, yes. Senator ROTH. What about its relationship to Sicilian organizec crime? Did you have any contact with Sicilians? Mr. CAFARO. No. No, Senator. Senator ROTH. Did your family? Mr. CAFARO. They are not recognized by us. Senator ROTH. Why is that? Mr. CAFARO. Because first of all you do not know who they are. They could come here and say, they're amico nostra from Sicily. You could be being introduced to an agent or whoever. And they are vicious. Senator ROTH. What do you mean by vicious? Mr. CAFARO. They got no respect for one another. And most of them are in the junk business. Senator ROTH. Now, you have reiterated several times that your family is not in the junk business. Do you see that Changing in the future? There are those who say it is a $100 billion a year business. Do you not see your family becoming involved? Mr. CAFARO. Well, no, like I always said, money makes a blind man see. So I do not know. Senator ROTH. Now, you stated that the penalty for individual LCN members dealing with drugs is death. Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator ROTH. Now, you also said that there are some LCN mem- bers who have been involved with drugs. Do you know of anyone that has been given the death penalty because he violated the pro- hibition against drugs? Mr. CAFARO. Well, like I said, I do not know about other families, Senator. I can speak for the Genovese family. I never heard of it with our family. Senator ROTH. Isn't that sort of an empty threat, then? Mr. CAFARO. There is a story years ago that I heard about Tony Bender. He was supposed to be fooling around with junk at one time. That is the time with Joe Cago—what is his name, Valachi? Senator NUNN. Joe Cago was Valachi. Mr. CAFARO. Yes, that is the only story I know, that he is miss- ing from then. Senator ROTH. He is missing, and that was 25 years ago. But there have been no recent cases? Mr. CAFARO. Not that I know of. Senator ROTH. My time is up, Mr. Chairman. Senator NUNN. Thank you, Senator Roth. Do you know, or have you heard anything, about Paul Castellano or the Gambino family being involved in drug trade? Mr. CAFARO. Well, from what I heard when I was in the streets, as far as the rules, no fooling around with junk. I cannot speak for another family. But what I was made to understand was that Paul was taking money from people that were around him in the junk business. He would say, you cannot fool around with junk, but leave the shop- ping bag, I will turn my head. In other words, leave the money. That is all I know about that, Senator. Senator NUNN. What is your opinion on why Paul Castellano was murdered? Do you have a view on that? Mr. CAFARO. A view? The greed. The greed. He would shake down everybody. He would shake down his men. In my opinion, he would shake down his mother, too. That was Paul. That is what I say got him killed. Senator NUNN. In other words, he didn't treat others Mr. CAFARO. As long as Neil was alive. Senator NUNN. Who was Neil? Mr. CAFARO. Neil Dellacroce. As long as he was alive, I think Paul would have still been alive today. Senator NUNN. Why is that? Mr. CAFARO. Because Neil was a guy that, he is the boss and that is it. Paul was his boss, and that was the way it was going to be. Senator NUNN. And Neil protected him? Mr. CAFARO. He protected him, yes. That is what I was made to understand. Senator NUNN. Was he protecting him with physical means, or was he protecting him because Neil was powerful himself and re- spected him? Mr. CAFARO. Well, Neil was powerful; he was the underboss. Neil Dellacroce. Senator NUNN. In other words, Neil's respect helped protect Paul Castellano? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. How did Vincent Gigante become a power in the Genovese family? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I say his power come from his regime. He has got a powerful regime. He has got maybe 30 or 40 members. That is without counting—he is affiliated with them. Senator NUNN. Let me shift back to the contractor business. Why would a contractor want to pay money to a member of orga- nized crime? Mr. CAFARO. Well, he gets jobs. And then don't forget, with the bid rigging. I can go in a bid for, let us say, $4 million. Maybe the job is only worth $3V2 million. So naturally the next contractor who is going to put in $4% million, who is going to put in $5 mil- lion. So there is money being made. And then they got the clearance with the unions. Do not have union problems as far as laborers, or the Teamsters. Senator NUNN. In other words, two reasons. One is, the contrac- tor makes more money Mr. CAFARO. Sure he does. Senator NUNN [continuing]. By bid rigging. The second reason is because the wiseguys can basically Mr. CAFARO. They control the unions. Senator NUNN [continuing]. Control the unions? Mr. CAFARO. The laborers, truck drivers, carpenters, brick layers. Senator NUNN. What is the incentive for the union leadership to be involved in that kind of operation? What do they get out of it? Mr. CAFARO. The delegates? They wheel and deal for themselves. They go to the contractor or whoever, and he gets x amount of dol- lars. Money goes right down the line. Senator NUNN. Other than the money, does the contractor give the wiseguy anything else in return for the job? Mr. CAFARO. He gives him the money, whatever he gives him. He gets maybe $50,000, maybe $100,000. Senator NUNN. What about subcontractors? Mr. CAFARO. Well, now there's some contractors is usually around wiseguys, so you get the plumber, he is looking for the job. So you tell him, all right, you go see so-and-so. Senator NUNN. So the wiseguy helps control the subcontractor? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, yes. Senator NUNN. In other words they help the contractor get the job? Mr. CAFARO. Then there is a subcontractor—if you got, let us say a plumber with you, or an electrician, or a carpenter, or the dry walls, you go to the contractor, you tell him, listen, give him this job, whatever. And that is how you get him. Senator NUNN. Do the wiseguys get money back from the sub- contractor by helping them get the job? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Yes. Senator NUNN. So basically they are controlling everything from one end to the other. Mr. CAFARO. Top to bottom. Senator NUNN. Top to bottom? Mr. CAFARO. Sure. Senator NUNN. Did you ever accept a finder's fee for helping a contractor obtain a job? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Tell us about that. Mr. CAFARO. Well, S&A Concrete was looking for a job on, I do not know if it was 35th Street or 36th Street, First Avenue, in New York City. And a friend of mine, his contractor had the job. So I went and see him, and tell him, listen, if you could, give S&A the concrete work and do me a favor. So he says, yeah, why not. So I got the job; he got the concrete work; and I got $240,000. Senator NUNN. Now, who did you split that with? Mr. CAFARO. Nobody. Senator NUNN. That was yours? Mr. CAFARO. Yeah. Senator NUNN. Let me ask you this. You said in some good years you made $1 million, $2 million dollars a year, and this $240,000; you were handling an awfully lot of money, right? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. Senator NUNN. Did you save any of it? Did you put it up? Mr. CAFARO. Nope. Senator NUNN. What happened to it? Mr. CAFARO. You want to tell them, Eleanore? I spent it, Sena- tor. Just gave it away. I never got it all at once. I never had a big lump of money. As I was making it, I was spending it: women, bar- tenders, waiters, hotels. Just spending the money. Senator NUNN. Spending, $400,000, $500,000, $600,000, $700,000 a year? Mr. CAFARO. Sure. Senator NUNN. A million dollars a year in some years? Mr. CAFARO. If I had it to spend, I'd spend $3 million. Senator NUNN. How do you spend $3 million? Mr. CAFARO. That's easy. Senator NUNN. Do you not get tired going out every night of the week? Mr. CAFARO. No, sir. Senator NUNN. Every night? Mr. CAFARO. Three, four nights a week. Senator NUNN. Did you loan money to people? Mr. CAFARO. I loaned a lot of money to people. Never got it back. Senator NUNN. Do you have a list? Did you keep up with it? Mr. CAFARO. I had the list. I used to ask now and then. But they say they're broke; they ain't got it; be a little patient, I will pay, and this and that. And I never got it back. So when this happened to me, how am I going to get it back? Senator NUNN. That is gone now, I take it. Mr. CAFARO. That is gone. That is all water under the bridge. Senator NUNN. Did you operate strictly on a cash basis? When you spent money, was it strictly cash? Mr. CAFARO. When I went out spending? Yes, strictly cash. Senator NUNN. Do you keep large amounts of cash on you? Mr. CAFARO. I used to go out with $5,000 to $10,000 in my pocket. Senator NUNN. Where did you keep the other cash that you had? Mr. CAFARO. Leave it at somebody's house, somebody hold it for me; $40,000, $50,000, $100,000, whatever I had. Senator NUNN. You did not operate through checking accounts, or anything of that nature? Mr. CAFARO. No, no. I wish I could have. Senator NUNN. Strictly cash? Mr. CAFARO. Strictly cash. Senator NUNN. What is your understanding of a commission meeting? Could you give us your definition of the word "commis- sion" and "meeting"? Mr. CAFARO. Well, from what I was made to understand, a com- mission meeting was made—the commission was formed in the late 1930s, after the wars. The wars, what I mean, the wars with the wiseguys. At the time, it was with the Sicilians. They were killing all the Sicilians in the 1920s and 1930s, when Luciano was in power. So after they, I guess, killed whatever they had to kill, and who- ever went back to Sicily, Luciano, they had killed, what's his name? Joe "the Boss" Masseria in New York? Joe the Boss. And he was the boss of bosses at the time. So when Luciano became in power, he says, it would not be fair for me to be boss of bosses, because you got a family, he's got a family, he's got a family. Why should I tell you what to do? We will form a commission, and we will straighten out our grievances. And the commission was only formed for the purpose of stopping wars. For peace. Senator NUNN. Do we have a boss of bosses now? Mr. CAFARO. No. Senator NUNN. So the commission is the hierarchy? Mr. CAFARO. Right. All the bosses sit at the commission. Senator NUNN. They are on the same level then? Mr. CAFARO. Right. And that is why the commission was formed in the late 1930s. Senator NUNN. Did you ever take Fat Tony Salerno to commis- sion meetings? Mr. CAFARO. Yes.
"Snakes... Snakes... I don't know no Snakes."
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
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01/09/14 11:10 PM
01/09/14 11:10 PM
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Joined: Feb 2013
Posts: 1,408
Snakes
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Senator Nunn. Would you tell us about that? I believe a couple of occasions. Tell us about the first one. Mr. Cafaro. I took him twice to Staten Island in the luncheon- ette there, I forget the name; it is on the paper there. The first time I took him, it was me, Tony and Vinnie DiNapoli. We met in this restaurant with Tommy Bilotti. He was caporegime in Paul's, in the Gambino family, and we went to a house in Staten L-land. I don't know where the house was. We were driven there by Tommy, and we went in and there was Paul, there was Tom Mix, there was Ralph Scopo, Donny Shacks; there was about four or five. But, anyway, there was, like I says, about five or six members there. Senator Nunn. Did you see them? Mr. Cafaro. Yes. Senator Nunn. You took Fat Tony there in the car? Mr. Cafaro. No. We were driven there. I took him to Staten Island in the luncheonette, but we were driven to this house. Senator Nunn. Did you go to the meeting? Mr. Cafaro. I went, but then we couldn t be at the meeting. We Rood upstairs and Senator Nunn. "We" being who? Mr. Cafaro. Me and Tommy Bilotti, and we stood, and there was four or five more amico nostras up there, wiseguys, and we just sat upstairs. And what was the discussion? Mostly about concrete and construction. Senator Nunn. Tony told you that? Mr. Cafaro. Yes. Senator Nunn. Concrete and Mr. Cafaro. Construction. Paul—every time there was a commis- sion meeting with Paul, it was always about business, money and business. Senator Nunn. What date was that, approximately, do you mow? Mr. Cafaro. I don't remember, Senator. Senator Nunn. Was that in the 1980's or Mr. Cafaro. 1984. Senator Nunn. All right. Was there any other commission meet- ng that you recall? Mr. Cafaro. I went to another one after that; I drove Tony, but I lidn't go. I just went to the same restaurant, luncheonette, or liner, whatever you want to call it, and we were waiting there, ome wiseguy come and pick us up; I forgot his name. And I didn't d. He drove Tony there and I was waiting in the luncheonette. Senator Nunn. You waited there for him? Mr. Cafaro. I waited at the diner or the luncheonette, whatever ou want to call it. Senator Nunn. Did the people like Tony that were going to the meeting, Tony Salerno, did they worry about being trailed or the Til or anybody following them? Mr. Cafaro. No, no. Senator Nunn. They didn't appear . Mr. Cafaro. Usually when I drove Tony, I would look in my mir- ors and try to be careful and go different ways. Senator Nunn. But they didn't appear to be worried about it? Mr. CAFARO. No, no. Senator NUNN. Now, was that the second meeting where they did think there was an FBI agent? Mr. CAFARO. That was the third meeting. I wasn't there, I wasn't present. Senator NUNN. Tell us about that third meeting. Mr. CAFARO. It was a meeting in Bari's on Houston Street. Senator NUNN. Is that a restaurant or what is it? Mr. CAFARO. No. They sell restaurant equipment, they sell res- taurant equipment, and Tony had an appointment down there. He went down with Tony Ducks and Tom Mix. I picked him up to go to the commission meeting there, and the meeting, from what I was made to understand, there was Paul, there was Chin—there was Paul, Chin, Joe Gallo, Donny Shacks, "Jerry Lang" Langella. Senator NUNN. How many different families was that? Mr. CAFARO. There was the four families there. Senator NUNN. Again, which family was not there? Mr. CAFARO. The Bonanno mob. Senator NUNN. Was that because of the narcotics involvement? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. They weren't recognized as far as . Senator NUNN. So they had four families there. What, a couple of people from each family? Mr. CAFARO. There was Jerry Lang and Donny Shacks for the Colombo mob. There was—Tony was with Chin for the Genovese mob. There was—for the Gambino mob was Paul and Joe Gallo, and who was the other one? Luchese was Tony Ducks and Tom Mix. Senator NUNN. All right. Go ahead and tell us what you know about that and what happened at that meeting. You weren't there, but you found out about it later, right? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. I was in the neighborhood and Tony had come back early. Usually, a commission meeting, they last 4 or 5 hours, 6 hours, and he come to the neighborhood and I seen him. He's huffing and puffing. I says, you know, how come you're back so early? Senator NUNN. He was huffing and puffing? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. I says to him, how come you're back so early? He says, no; he says, there was the agents down there. I says, no kidding? He says, yes. Senator NUNN. What agents? Mr. CAFARO. Well, Federal agents. Senator NUNN. Federal agents. Mr. CAFARO. He says, there was the agents there; he said, we had to get out. We, you know, went out. He says, I had to go through a window. He says, they had to push me through the window to get out. He couldn t fit; he was too fat. Senator NUNN. He got stuck in the window? Mr. CAFARO. He got stuck in the window and they had to push him out, and that was it. Senator NUNN. So they were worried about the agents at that meeting? Mr. CAFARO. Well, this Baldy Dom had—he's a caporegime with us in our brugad, says he seen an agent outside. So rather than to get pinched or the a"""*" -n ;n, they all ran. Senator NUNN. Did you find out whether there really was an agent out there later on? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I had asked Rick. He says there wasn't no agents there, so who knows if there was an agent or there wasn't an agent? I really don't know. Senator NUNN. Do you think—we've had a lot of convictions of the top members of various families in New York and elsewhere. Do you think there still is a commission in New York? Mr. CAFARO. To my knowledge, no, and I don't think there will ever be a commission anymore. Senator NUNN. Why is that? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you haven't got the Fat Tonys no more. You haven't got the Tony Ducks, you haven't got the Tom Mixes. The oldtimers are not there no more and I say there will never be an- other commission. Senator NUNN. You're still going to have the families, though, aren't you? Mr. CAFARO. Well, you can talk boss to boss. You send your con- sigliere there if there's a problem in the family. Senator NUNN. In other words, you think it will be more boss-to- boss, one family to another, and not the whole group meeting to- gether? Mr. CAFARO. That's right. Senator NUNN. Why would not their successors follow that pat- tern? Mr. CAFARO. Well, why they won't follow the same pattern as the oldtimers? Senator NUNN. Yes. Mr. CAFARO. Well, you haven't got the oldtimers there no more and the young guys that are there now, they are not as level- headed as the oldtimers. They are not peace-minded. I don't think they are peace-minded, which the oldtimers, there was nothing but peace and if you Senator NUNN. Well, the purpose of the commission was peace and you don't believe that that will be organized that way? Mr. CAFARO. No, because you get a—from what I see of Johnny Gotti—I met him in MCC, like I said. He ain't going to—he has got an attitude that, hey, this is my brugad and nobody is going to tell me what to do. Or Chin ain't going to make anybody tell him what to do with his brugad. Senator NUNN. Can you tell us what the consigliere does in the overall family? Mr. CAFARO. Well, the consigliere, he's the powerhouse, he's the strength, because he takes care of all the beefs from the captains. In other words, a captain can't go to a boss or the underboss unless he goes to the consigliere. Senator NUNN. So he's really the Mr. CAFARO. He's the strength, he's the powerhouse. Senator NUNN. The operating officer, so to speak? Mr. CAFARO. Oh, yes. He—whatever decision he gives, that's it. You don't go—unless it's rare that you want to go further. What I mean by "further," you want to go to the underboss or the boss. But once the consigliere gives you his decision, that's it. Senator NUNN. I understand that you have stated there are cer- tain new rules for admitting members to the LCN. Could you tell us what those new rules are? Mr. CAFARO. I didn't hear you, Senator. Senator NUNN. I understand that you have stated that there are certain new rules for admission to membership, for being straight- ened out, for being a made man. Could you tell us what those new rules are? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I don't know about new rules, but I know there was a new rule put in about 10 years ago because years ago they used to call in the books when you had to open the books to straighten out a member. If you wanted to make a guy a member, the books had to be opened. It got to a point where the books weren't open for maybe 15, 20 years. The brugads wouldn't open them and what was happening, the regimes—a lot of oldtimers were dying and the regimes were getting small. So a captain with maybe 15, 20 men was down to 8 men, 7 men, and ifhey were weakening their positions. So they instituted—if a member dies, they can replace him with another member. That's the only new rule I knew of. Senator NUNN. So the books aren't closed now? Mr. CAFARO. There's no more books. Senator NUNN. No more books? Mr. CAFARO. If somebody dies in the regime, he can be replaced by another member. Senator NUNN. So it's on automatic pilot now? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator NUNN. You are trying to maintain about the same number of members? Mr. CAFARO. That's the purpose of it. Senator NUNN. But not have the membership go down? Mr. CAFARO. Not have it go down. You're allowed seven men in a regime and when they got to straighten out a member, they send his name around. They give it to the consigliere, his name and nickname, and it goes to the four families. If there's any grievance against him or if maybe he's a rat or something, if somebody knows there's something against him, they would check it out, and that's the purpose of sending the name around. Senator NUNN. Were you told anything about the disappearance of the Luchese family acting boss, Buddy Luongo? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, Senator. When I was wearing the wire, I was talking to Ralphie Tutino, and I wasn't aware of it because I think I was out on bail or something. And he had told me this Buddy Luongo had an appointment with this Little Vic in Brooklyn and he went out there to meet him and he never came back. That's all I know about that. Senator NUNN. Who is Little Vic? Mr. CAFARO. At the time I had knew him, he was the consigliere in the Luchese mob. Senator NUNN. Do you have any other name, any other name be- sides Little Vic? Mr. CAFARO. That's all I know him as, Little Vic. Senator Nunn. Why are there so many people that you were with all the time that you don't really know their last names? Mr. Cafaro. They usually give you their nickname. Senator Nunn. So you usually don't use last names? Mr. Cafaro. We don't use last names, no. Senator Nunn. Were you just known as Fish? Mr. Cafaro. Yes, Senator. Senator Nunn. Where did that name come from? Mr. Cafaro. I don't know. I got it since I'm 8 years old. Where, how it came from, I really don't know. Senator Nunn. Just a nickname? Mr. Cafaro. Just a nickname. Senator Nunn. Senator Roth. Senator Roth. Thank you, Mr. Chairman. You mentioned that both Chin Gigante and John Gotti were claiming part of the profits from the sale of the Bankers and Bro- kers Building in Lower Manhattan. Can you explain in greater detail how this came about and whether they did, in fact, receive part of the profits of that sale? Mr. Cafaro. Well, there was a situation there—when Paul was alive, he had sold this property to S&A Concrete, Nick Auletta, I think, for $4.5 million, with the understanding that he was going to build a high-rise there. Now, as it went along he didn't build a high-rise. He was selling the property, I don't know, for $7, $8, $9 million. That's when Paul didn t like the idea. In other words, he told him, I sold you the building with the understanding that you would build a high-rise. Now, he wanted to turn around and sell it, like I said, for $7 or $8 million; I really don't know. But Paul wanted half of the profits on the sale of the building and Tony got involved with that. Then he had never gotten nothing from Nicky, Paul, but Tony got his share from the sale of the build- ing. Now, who wanted to get involved there was Chin, but he put up a little problem there from what Sammy was telling me, but it didn't belong to him; it belonged to Tony, and that s how Tony wound up with the money. Now, as far as Gotti, I don't know if he got anything out of it; I doubt it. That's my opinion. He was looking to take over Paul's share if there was a share for him to—if he was entitled to any- thing. Senator Roth. In view of the fact that many of the recent cases brought by the Government were the result of wiretaps or bugs, what do you think the LCN will do to take steps to avoid their con- versations? Mr. Cafaro. I know they are not going to talk in clubs anymore. They are not going to talk in places they hang out. They are not going to talk on phones. If anything, they will send a soldier to an- other soldier or a captain to another captain, if there's going to be the consigliere for a meeting, and tell them, say, Bobby or whoever, Til be at this restaurant tonight at 7 o'clock, to meet me there. And that's how they would do it, or walk and talk in the streets. Senator Roth. Will they avoid meeting places they used in the t? Mr. Cafaro. Sure, yes. Senator Roth. Did you know that the Palma Boys Social Club and the First Avenue Club were bugged, and if so, why did you and others continue to hold conversations there? Mr. Cafaro. Well, we were told they were bugged and I guess we took it lightly. I figured me, gambling and bookmaking; I didn't care. Senator Roth. Do you know how Santora knew about the bug? Mr. Cafaro. Well, he had somebody telling him. From what agency, I don't know. Senator Roth. What do you mean by "agency?" Mr. Cafaro. Well, it could be a police department, it could be the Government, it could have been anybody. Senator Roth. Does the LCN have many people in law enforce- ment agencies or in public office under their influence or control? Mr. Cafaro. As far as the past amico nostra, 14, 15 years, not that I know of. Senator Nunn. Do you know of any high governmental officials that are being paid or cooperating illegally? Mr. Cafaro. No, sir. Senator Nunn. You don't? Mr. Cafaro. No, no. Senator Roth. You and others apparently knew in advance who was going to be arrested or subpoenaed. Mr. Cafaro. Yes, indictments and subpoenas. Senator Roth. How did you get that information? Mr. Cafaro. My nephew, Sammy Santora. Senator Roth. Where did he get the information? Mr. Cafaro. I don't know, Senator, but whatever information he gave us, whatever he told us was on the money. Senator Roth. It was always accurate? Mr. Cafaro. As far as indictments and subpoenas, it was on the money. Senator Roth. Did you know in advance of your impending arrest? Mr. Cafaro. Yes, Senator. Senator Roth. How far? Mr. Cafaro. Two weeks before. Senator Roth. Two weeks? Mr. Cafaro. Yes. Senator Roth. How did you know? Who told you? Mr. Cafaro. My nephew, Sammy Santora. Senator Roth. And your nephew gave no indication to you how he acquired this information? Mr. Cafaro. You can't ask, you don't ask. Senator Roth. You don't ask? Mr. Cafaro. No. Senator Roth. When you got information that you were going to be arrested, what action did you take? Mr. Cafaro. I said let them come and pinch me. I wasn't inter- ested in going on the lamb. Senator Roth. And so you chose not to run? Mr. Cafaro. No. I stood home. Senator ROTH. Was that because you thought the charges would be relatively minor, such as bookmaking? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I figure bookmaking and gambling, but I didn't think I was going to be held a danger to the community. If I thought that, I would have went on the lamb. Senator ROTH. You've stated that it's no longer necessary for one to kill to become a made guy. When did this rule change and why? Mr. CAFARO. Well, as far as I can remember, 14 years ago when I was—or 15 years ago when I was straightened out. A lot of guys, you straighten them out for business because a lot of us don't un- derstand about construction, whatever, situations like that, electri- cal work, contracting or plumbing. We don't understand that there, so you straighten out a guy. You make him an amico nostra just to take care of business that you don't have to be there with him, because if you're not a made member and you're sitting down, you can't sit down with a made member. So rather than to be there—say, me, and I don't know nothing about the construction, to go sit down with a beef about it, I don't know what I'm talking about. So you straighten out people just for business. Senator ROTH. Now, earlier, you told me that you thought the families would continue and that even though the younger mem- bers were perhaps less disciplined, that through orientation, train- ing, whatever you want to call it, that they would become much like the current members of organized crime. Yet, at the same time you say you don't think the commission will ever be recreated because there will never be new bosses like the old. Isn't that somewhat inconsistent? Mr. CAFARO. No, that's not inconsistent. Like I says, you get a Gptti and a Chin. First of all, there's no need for a commission with them because, like I says, it's not that there's the disrespect. The respect is there; the respect will always be there. But a Chin or a Gotti wouldn't need a committee. You do your thing, I'll do my thing, and that's it. There's nothing taken away from me and there's nothing taken from you. Senator ROTH. Now, you mentioned earlier that your family had no association or contact with Sicily. How about some of the other criminal groups, such as the Colombians? Mr. CAFARO. I don't know about them. Well, I have business with the Cubans. Senator ROTH. With the Cubans? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Senator ROTH. What kind of business did you have with the Cubans? Mr. CAFARO. Number business. Senator ROTH. What's that? Mr. CAFARO. Numbers. Senator ROTH. Numbers? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, yes. I had Cubans with me. Senator ROTH. Did any of these groups, like the Cubans, try to intrude on your area of activity? Mr. CAFARO. In what way, Senator? Senator ROTH. Well, did they begin to try to take over some of the racketeering or gambling business? Mr. CAFARO. No, no. They want to be with the wiseguys; they don't want to be against them. Senator ROTH. They wanted to work with you? Mr. CAFARO. They want to work with you, yes, and I had a lot of Cubans with me. Senator ROTH. There has been no effort on the part of drug traf- fickers to work with your family? Mr. CAFARO. Well, if they were fooling around, you know, with junk or something, I don't know about it, but who knows? Senator ROTH. What rank did you hold in the Genovese family? Mr. CAFARO. I was a soldier. Senator ROTH. Why, particularly in view of your close relation- ship with Fat Tony, did you not rise higher? Mr. CAFARO. I didn't want the responsibility. I didn't want to be responsible. I didn't want to—when he left on a Thursday morning, I left with him. When you were a captain, you have to be there— not have to be there; you're on call 24 hours a day in case there's a problem or beefs or whatever. So that wasn't for me. I wasn't inter- ested. But you can't refuse. Senator ROTH. Mr. Cafaro, 2 weeks . Senator NUNN. Excuse me, Senator Roth. Would you yield? Senator ROTH. Yes. Senator NUNN. You say you can't refuse if you're asked to take that responsibility? Mr. CAFARO. That's right, you can't. The only reason why I got away with it is because of Tony. There was a position open at the time, the caporegime. I says, no, Tony, I'm not interested. He says all right. Senator NUNN. So it was handled informally? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, it was informal. If I would have said Senator NUNN. Tony protected you when he needed you and you didn't want it? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. If, say, Chin would have asked me, I had to accept. When the consigliere tells you, you have to accept, yes. Senator ROTH. Let me ask you this question. We had Angelo Lo- nardo testify before us a few days ago and he said that if he had his life to live again, he would not repeat his mob activities be- cause, as he said, it created too many headaches. By "headaches," I think he was referring to arrests, jail terms, and so forth. If you had the chance to do it all over again, would you do things differently or would you again be a member of the family? Mr. CAFARO. In my honest opinion, I would be a member of the family, but I would do it in a different way. I wouldn't be close to Tony or any boss or any consigliere. I'd just stay by myself, a club or whatever, and that's it. Senator ROTH. But don't you, as a member of a family, have to do what they tell you to do? Mr. CAFARO. Sure. Senator ROTH. Well, then, how can you stay Mr. CAFARO. In other words, stay by myself, don't stay with— you're not supposed to be with the bosses anyway. Senator ROTH. In other words, you think you were too close to the bosses? Mr. CAFARO. Too close, that's a fact. Senator ROTH. But why would you want to be a member again? You say that your life is in danger now, is that correct? Mr. CAFARO. That's the way I chose it. What can I do? But it's not good and it's not bad. Senator ROTH. Let me ask you this. Who do you think, let's say 5 years from now, will be boss of your family? Mr. CAFARO. If anything happens to Chin? Senator ROTH. Yes. Mr. CAFARO. I would say Bobby Manna. Senator ROTH. Bobby who? Mr. CAFARO. Bobby Manna. Senator ROTH. Now, who is he? Mr. CAFARO. He's the consigliere now. Senator ROTH. After 36 years of friendship with Tony Salerno, during which time I think you said that he was like a father to you, why did you agree to cooperate with law enforcement? Mr. CAFARO. Well, when I was in MCC for the 7 Vfe months, I was having a lot of trouble with Tony over some moneys, and I owed him, I think, $65,000 that I had used of his money, not knowing I wasn't going to get bail when we got arrested. If I would have got bail, there would have been no problem with the money, and I had owed him $65,000. And when you get pinched and you're in jail, no bail, nobody wants to loan you money any- more; they look the other way. So I had owed him $65,000 and we were arguing every day over the money, but I paid him the money. And we had some slot ma- chines going; I had some slot machines in the streets and I used to give Tony a third. So one day I told him he's got no more revenues coming from the slot machine; whatever comes from there, I'm keeping. And he says, no; he says, it's my business. I says, no, it's not your business, it's mine; I created the business. So he says to me, he says, well, he says, I'll pick up this cane and I'll hit you with it. So I says to him, well, that s the biggest mistake you'll make in your life if you ever pick up that cane to me. And that's how I think I turned. Senator ROTH. Do you have any family? Mr. CAFARO. Do I have a family? Senator ROTH. Personal family, yes. Are you married? Senator NUNN. Senator Roth, I don't think he wants to Senator ROTH. I think that's all the questions I have at this time, Mr. Chairman. Senator NUNN. Thank you, Senator Roth. When you had that argument with Fat Tony and he threatened to hit you with a cane, did that lead you to believe you might be on his hit list? Mr. CAFARO. No, no. Senator NUNN. In other words, how do you distinguish between a threat like that Mr. CAFARO. Well, you know, when a relationship like me and Tony for 30-something years—I thought it was a father and son re- lationship, but when it came to the money, I said for money, is this what—I would have killed him; I would have killed him in MCC. Senator NUNN. You would have killed him if what? Mr. CAFARO. If he would have picked up the cane. Senator NUNN. Even though he'd been like a father to you? Mr. CAFARO. That's right. The disrespect was there. There wasn't respect anymore, not when you're going to argue for $65,000. I gave that out in tips. I got to argue for $65,000? Let him use it, let him use it all. Whatever I had, he could have had. Senator NUNN. He had insulted you at that stage? Mr. CAFARO. Yes. Well, from—we were there about three months. He started asking, you know, about moneys and this and that, whatever the situation was. So it was all over moneys. Senator NUNN. Let me ask you two or three other questions. You've mentioned a few unions this morning. Do you know other unions that have not been mentioned this morning by you in your testimony here that are controlled in New York City by LCN fami- lies? Mr. CAFARO. Well, there's the Kennedy Airport; that's controlled by the Luchese mob. That's controlled by them, and as far as the garment center, from what I know, the whole four families are in- volved with the unions in the garment center. That's what I know about that. Senator NUNN. Is that done by territory? How do they decide what family controls what? Mr. CAFARO. Well, I don't know. I wouldn't say it's territories; it's not the question of territories. If you got certain houses down there—what I was made to understand by "houses" is these lofts that make the clothes, dresses, coats, or whatever. So if you got four or five houses in one building, that's yours, and the union down there controls all that there. But I don't know too much about the garment center, Senator, as far as the unions, you know. Senator NUNN. Mr. Cafaro, nearly 25 years ago an individual named Joe Valachi testified before this Subcommittee about the ex- istence of La Cosa Nostra in the United States. Did you ever meet Mr. Valachi? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, I knew Joe Cago, Valachi. Senator NUNN. You call him Joe Cago? Mr. CAFARO. Joe Cago, yes. Senator NUNN. When did you meet him? Tell us about that. Mr. CAFARO. Well, he was born and raised in Harlem. He was born and raised in Harlem and he was an amico nostra in our brugad. He was with Tony—at the time, Tom Rena. I don't know who Tom Rena was, but he was a captain, and from there he was with Tony Bender. And I had a candy store, a club, on 115th Street between First and Second Avenue, and he had come down one day with Joey Pagano and I was friendly with Joey. How are you? How do you feel? Fine. How are you? One word to another, he says, you got gambling here? I says, yes, I got blackjack and poker games in the back, you know. He says, listen, he says, maybe I could send some guys down and play. So I says, for what? He says, well, he says, we'll send five or six players and we'll take a piece of the game. Right away, he's looking to shake me down. So I didn't say noth- ing. I says, no, I says, we don't need no players here. I got—I'm doing all right the way I am. Well, he says, think about it. He says, we'll send some players. What I should have said to him then is mention Tony's name, Fat Tony; listen, I'm with Fat Tony, because I knew what he was leading up to. So I says, all right, I'll let you know tomorrow, and I went and see Tony and I told him. He said I close the club or the candy store, whatever you want to call it; close it up, he says, and come and stay here. The next day, I seen Joe Cago. I says, no; I'm closing the joint. And I went and stayed with Tony. I opened up a club over there. And that was it, the first time—not the first time I met Joe Cago. I seen him a few times. Senator NUNN. Did you have any other relationship with Vala- chi? Mr. CAFARO. No, no. Senator NUNN. Were you a made member at the time he testi- fied before this Subcommittee? Mr. CAFARO. No. That was 25 years ago, Senator. Senator NUNN. Do you recall that? Did you follow it? Mr. CAFARO. Yes, yes. I was watching it on television. Senator NUNN. What was the reaction in the family based on that testimony? What was that Mr. CAFARO. What was my reaction? Senator NUNN. Your reaction and the reaction of others that you knew. Did you hear them talk about that, Fat Tony or any of them, later on? Mr. CAFARO. No. I was in the bar. No, Tony wasn't there; a few people. He's a rat. What's the reaction? Senator NUNN. Yes. We appreciate very much your being here, Mr. Cafaro. You have given us a lot of interesting information this morning. We appreci- ate your attorney being here and we appreciate your cooperation before this Subcommittee. Mr. CAFARO. Thank you, Senator. Mr. EAMES. Thank you very much. Senator NUNN. We have Exhibits 28 through 58 which, without objection, will be made part of the record. [See Exhibit Nos. 28-60 starting on p. 801.] The Subcommittee will now adjourn. Thank you very much. Mr. CAFARO. Thank you, Senator. [Whereupon, at 11:39 a.m., the Subcommittee was adjourned.]
"Snakes... Snakes... I don't know no Snakes."
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
#757929
01/10/14 01:44 AM
01/10/14 01:44 AM
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Wilson101
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
#757951
01/10/14 11:21 AM
01/10/14 11:21 AM
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F_white
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Nice.
Last edited by F_white; 01/10/14 11:22 AM.
From now on, nothing goes down unless I'm involved. No blackjack no dope deals, no nothing. A nickel bag gets sold in the park, I want in. You guys got fat while everybody starved on the street. Now it's my turn.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: IvyLeague]
#758015
01/10/14 03:14 PM
01/10/14 03:14 PM
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pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
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The Fuckin Doctor

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I havent read that stuff in years. Kudos to whoever posted it  . Quick fun fact coming up. Here's the difference between the Cassos and Amusos of that life, and of the Westside guys of that life: When Fat Pete Chiodo flipped, those lunatics shot his sister, trunked his uncle, and tried to blow up his 96 year old grandmother. When the Fish flipped, the Westside administration put their arms around his family (especially his son), and tried to help them. Tommy Cafaro is STILL tight with that crew, and grateful for everything they did for him and his family. Now look how things worked out for the Brooklyn Luccheses circa 1988, compared to the Bronx/Harlem faction of the Genovese family. Need I say more? 
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: pmac]
#758027
01/10/14 04:06 PM
01/10/14 04:06 PM
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Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
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The Fuckin Doctor

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is fish still alive? and im guessing he probably never moved far way, maybe florida or somewhere he stopd cooperating or I sure they would have used him in the gigante trial. seems like he made a shitload of money riding fat tonys coattail. do you think they'll ever give his kid his button he's done a ton of time for them. he got picked up a lot by cookie d'urso, just talking and really giving a lot of guys credit not bad mouthing people like most do. I love the video of fat tony swinging his cane and talking shit to the press outside the courthouse and his xmis cards he sent to all the families other bosses. anyone got the card pic wonder how the fbi got it. No, Tommy won't ever get his button. But I don't think he wants it anymore, anyway. He has a lot going on without it. He hates his father like poison, and that whole crew loves him for it. So he'll never have a problem. That's really all you can ask for when you have a lowlife like The Fish for a father. Tommy's only problem is that he looks just like him  . And you're right, pmac. Rumor has it that The Fish was always on the East Coast. The Carolinas on down.
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
#795814
08/13/14 03:18 PM
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bernabei
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I became good friends with Vince mid nineties until around 2000 when I changed occupations and moved. I did not stay in touch with him after that which Ive typically done all my life [bad about staying in touch with people]. I did not know who he "really" was and we were drawn to each other due to our love for our Italian heritage, food, etc. This was an area where there weren't a lot of Italian people so we hung out 5 or 6 days a week either where I worked, as did he, or we'd go out after and eat, drink, etc. We hung out, just the 2 of us many nights talking about NY, the good ol' days, etc. He lived alone in a small modest apartment. He was fun, liked by the people that came through our work place, but seemed weird he had no one in his life. When he drank a lot, he started to confide in me that he was involved in some stuff and was on the lam. He spoke of his son and his concerns for him as well. He said it involved the mob and threw some hefty names around at times. I thought he was blowin' hot air, tipsy from the booze at times, and never really took it very serious. Last night I thought of Vince and decided to google his name to find out if he'd passed being he had a heart attack around '98 or '99 and saw he'd died in 2004. Under that same search I came across a lot of interesting info including the above post content. Google images turned up only 2, a courtroom sketch and what looked like a surveilence photo with him in it. It was definitely him. I spent hours trying to dig up more info and read that after this hearing, he'd testified against Gotti and disappeared in the federal witness protection in 1990. What doesn't make sense is why he was using his real name when I knew him? I also found nothing publicly on line about where he'd gone after disappearing. Am I the only person who knows both where he was and who he really was? Im finding this to be almost unreal and interesting at the same time. Is this something I should even be posting?
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: bernabei]
#795817
08/13/14 03:42 PM
08/13/14 03:42 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
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The Fuckin Doctor

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
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He's a lying sack of shit without a single redeeming quality. It's touching that he was so worried about Tommy, though. Seeing as that poor guy certainly could have been killed for his old mans transgressions. But Tommy and the rest of the family were of the rare character that people rallied around them instead of turning on them. In turn, they never wanted anything to do with The Fish ever again. But welcome to the board, buddy  .
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
#795822
08/13/14 04:08 PM
08/13/14 04:08 PM
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Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 4
bernabei
Associate
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Associate
Joined: Aug 2014
Posts: 4
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http://crestleaf.com/p/50ba9664651a69e4d4cc9f3b/vincent-d-cafaro Same date of Birth as his Wikipedia reference. That's what got me hunting for an image to confirm. As soon as I saw the images I knew that was definitely him. He spoke about the "chin" thing which was going on at that time-everything adds up now. Referred to his wife as "Nettie" if I remember correctly. He worked at the security entrance desk checking badges where I worked. He always had spending cash but never really knew how much, loved scotch [white Label I think and dimple Pinch]. My great grandfather and grandfather were good friends with Ritchie "The Boot". When I told him my Great grandfather came over in 1910 and ended up working for "The Boot" back in the old days re-distilling government seized booze that ended back in the hands of the wiseguys..he lit up and more alcohol fueled talks began to unravel more info. I just didn't truly believe it all. I understand the feelings of some on here, but remember I knew a different guy then. He didn't reveal to me he ratted out. So...I remember him as a friend who'd do anything for me. I was his best friend at that time as he was partial to Italians and I was from Jersey and all. Reading the above testimony blows my mind that that was him.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: bernabei]
#795825
08/13/14 04:13 PM
08/13/14 04:13 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
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The Fuckin Doctor

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
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I understand the feelings of some on here, but remember I knew a different guy then. He didn't reveal to me he ratted out. So...I remember him as a friend who'd do anything for me. Well, I'm sorry if I snapped at you. I certainly didn't mean anything by it. But if Charles Manson went into the program and you met him years later thinking he was a changed man, only to find out later who he really was, you'd probably be singing a different tune. The Fish had murders on him that the Feds knew about and they covered them up because they wanted Fat Tony so bad. The guy was a piece of human garbage. His own son, who I've known for forty years, wished him death every day since the last time he layed eyes on him. That speaks volumes of the man's true character.
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: bernabei]
#795826
08/13/14 04:15 PM
08/13/14 04:15 PM
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Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296 Throggs Neck
pizzaboy
The Fuckin Doctor
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The Fuckin Doctor

Joined: Dec 2006
Posts: 23,296
Throggs Neck
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Why was he using his real name...that's the only thing that doesn't make sense. I don't know, and I don't care. When he was living down by the Outer Banks I was told he had a Jewish name. That's all I know.
"I got news for you. If it wasn't for the toilet, there would be no books." --- George Costanza.
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Re: Vincent "Fish" Cafaro Testimony from 1988
[Re: Snakes]
#974067
06/28/19 06:33 PM
06/28/19 06:33 PM
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Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 259
Quiet_Doms
Capo
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Capo
Joined: Aug 2013
Posts: 259
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