Before his 1993 murder conviction, Tommy Ricciardi was the top enforcer for the Lucchese crime family’s New Jersey faction. Tall, slender, with natural good looks, Ricciardi was in actuality the kind of honorable man Silvio Dante believes he is. The television mobster, like his real-life counterpart, likes to dress well in wiseguy chic, and they both carry themselves with a don’t-mess-with-me swagger.
Vincent 'Jimmy
Sinatra' Craparotta,
victim
Ricciardi’s negotiating skills were a bit blunter than Silvio’s, and his version of conflict resolution was more hands on. In 1984 Ricciardi was asked to send a message to Vincent Craparotta, the uncle of two brothers who owned the video poker factory on the Jersey shore. They wanted a piece of that company, and they wanted Craparotta to convince his nephews that they should cooperate. Wielding golf clubs, Ricciardi and an associate paid a visit to Craparotta one morning. Their intention was to scare the man, but things got out of hand, and Craparotta ended up dead, beaten to death with a nine iron. In 1993, Ricciardi, boss Michael Taccetta, and others stood trial on a variety of charges stemming from the family’s attempt to extort the Joker Poker company. Ricciardi alone was convicted of the murder.
A type of video poker machine (AP)
Prior to that trial, Ricciardi did show a willingness to put words before bullets when the order came down from the Lucchese leadership in New York to “Whack New Jersey!” He and former boss of the New Jersey faction Anthony Accetturo met with big boss Vic Amuso and underboss Anthony “Gaspipe” Casso at Newark International Airport to resolve their differences.
Unfortunately the meeting did little to defuse the situation; the contract remained in force, even after Amuso and Casso later went underground to avoid arrest. Acting New York boss Alphonse “Little Al” D’Arco took over for the fugitive bosses and was determined to carry out the contract on the Garden State gangsters, including Ricciardi who resorted to hiding guns in the bushes around his home, fearing an ambush. Ricciardi went so far as to clear the woods across the street from his Dover Township, New Jersey, horse farm to eliminate possible hitmen hiding places
While at home, he took to wearing an Uzi submachine gun attached to a string around his neck.
After Ricciardi’s murder conviction, he turned state’s witness and received a reduced sentence. As part of the terms of his arrangement with prosecutors, Ricciardi had to tell everything he knew about organized crime in the Garden State, and he had no trouble coughing up what he knew about Michael Taccetta, his former childhood friend and bitter enemy.
From Taccetta’s point of view, Ricciardi is a rat who violated his Mafia oath and betrayed his crime family to save his own hide. But Ricciardi saw it differently. The mob had been deteriorating for years. The old traditions were evaporating and so was the Mafia’s old sense of honor. Taccetta was symptomatic of the new level of greed and opportunism that was corroding the Mob, and Ricciardi couldn’t live with that anymore. He could no longer defend an organization whose leadership he didn’t respect.
Ricciardi served his sentence under witness protection and has been released.
Source:
http://www.trutv.com/library/crime/gangsters_outlaws/mob_bosses/sopranos/3.html