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Re: Is the Genovese family back to using front bosses?
[Re: CabriniGreen]
#875769
02/17/16 01:05 AM
02/17/16 01:05 AM
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
IvyLeague
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Joined: Aug 2008
Posts: 8,534
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@ Ivey You can see how a guy gets confused by the arguments made here sometimes, I mentioned this awhile back. Do we respect Capeci as a credible source, THE credible source, or is he a hack who has people writing for him if he contradicts what we think?
Same sorta thing happened with Cefalu and Cali, I get confused a lot lol.... Capeci has proven himself to be one of the most informed and consistent mob journalists out there. Right up there with Raab or Robbins. Does that mean he's infallible? No. But he's more well informed and still has better resources than anyone on these forums. I don't care who they are. Both the Amuso/Crea and Cefalu/Cali things were rather unusual. But it just goes to show that, once in a while, his sources may say different things and he's not afraid to point that out. That gives him more credibility in my book. And it really shouldn't be used as an excuse by every armchair expert on the forum to float their own theories, which they usually pull out of their ass.
Mods should mind their own business and leave poster's profile signatures alone.
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Re: Is the Genovese family back to using front bosses?
[Re: Regoparker100]
#875781
02/17/16 06:27 AM
02/17/16 06:27 AM
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Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 1,516
gangstereport
Underboss
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Underboss
Joined: Aug 2015
Posts: 1,516
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gangland is respected by everyone even mobsters according to capeci alot of these guys have gangland article printed of then deleveried to them because the know hi articles are good and for guys in prison they are able to keep up with news from the street geogre borgesi is a well known example of this
here is a old article from 2013 not full thing
Gang Land A Must Read For Feds and Wiseguys
Testimony at the mob trial in Philadelphia has also led to several shout-outs for Gang Land, which is apparently must reading for both mobsters and the agents who track them.
Joaquin (Big Jack) Garcia, the retired FBI agent who worked undercover for years building a case against Greg DePalma and the acting hierarchy of the Gambino crime family a decade ago, discussed the phenomenon on the witness stand.
Garcia, who was called as an expert witness to provide details about mob structure and protocol, testified about a key piece of evidence against Ligambi — a secretly recorded conversation of a four-hour lunch meeting at LaGriglia, a popular North Jersey restaurant in Kenilworth. The tape was made by the late Nicholas (Nicky Skins) Stefanelli (see below), a Gambino soldier.
Prosecutors have called the session a meeting of the "board of directors" of organized crime. Ligambi and three other Philadelphia mobsters met with six members of the Gambino organization, including John Gambino who was described as a capo and part of the "administration" then running the family.
During his cross-examination, Garcia said that Domenico (Italian Dom) Cefalu is now the Gambino boss, but at the time of the meeting, in May 2010, the Gambinos were being directed by a panel that included John Gambino.
Cefalu's ascension in 2011 was well documented, he said, and under cross-examination said one of the first public disclosures of the change was by Gang Land.
"Capeci is pretty knowledgeable," Garcia said about the regular author of the column.
"Isn't it true guys in prison read Gang Land News to keep up?" asked defense attorney Christopher Warren.
"Absolutely," said Garcia. "A lot of it is good information."
But the Bureau of Prisons does its best to keep inmates from being as tuned into Gang Land as their federal pursuers .
Later in the trial it was disclosed that Warren's client, George Borgesi, routinely had his wife print out and mail the Gang Land column to him since he could not subscribe from behind bars. But a prison official testified that for undisclosed "security reasons,"Borgesi's jailers, who routinely read all incoming mail inmates receive, stopped Borgesi from receiving the weekly column.
At the time, according to trial testimony, Borgesi was an "inmate of concern" who was under investigation by the FBI and all his incoming and outgoing mail was read, copied, and forwarded to the FBI.
A BOP spokesman declined to discuss the "security" issues that Gang Land posed during the Borgesi investigation, but as a general rule, he said, the wardens of all BOP facilities make those determinations "on a case by case basis."
Not connected with scott or anyone at gangsterreport
Sorry for the confusion
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