Agent: Mob Bosses Discussed Giuliani Hit
Informant Said Late Gambino Crime Boss John Gotti Wanted Hit, FBI Agent Says In Court
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Then U.S. Attorney Rudy Giuliani talks to media in New York City in this Dec. 13, 1984, file photo. Before Giuliani became New York mayor, he had a track record of high-profile mob prosecutions. (AP / file)
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The details about the plot which never took shape were given to ex-FBI agent Roy Lindley DeVecchio by the late Gregory Scarpa Sr., a capo-turned-informant, according to the testimony of FBI agent William Bolinder.
DeVecchio is accused of forming an illicit alliance with Scarpa that lead to at least four slayings. He has denied the allegations.
Before Giuliani became New York mayor, he had a track record of high-profile mob prosecutions. In 1986, Giuliani indicted the heads of the five families. That same year, the mobsters purportedly discussed the hit.
Giuliani, a Republican, is now running for president. A telephone message seeking comment from a Giuliani's campaign spokeswoman was not immediately returned Thursday.
In testimony Wednesday, Bolinder said that DeVecchio's 1987 debriefing report stated Scarpa told him the late Gambino crime boss John Gotti was for ordering the hit, and had the support of the leader of the Colombo crime family.
However, Bolinder said, the heads of the Bonanno, Lucchese and Genovese groups were against the idea, and it never materialized.
Scarpa had a colorful history, and it wouldn't be the first time that outlandish stories followed him: He purportedly helped the FBI solve the 1964 murders of three civil-rights workers in Mississippi by strong-arming a Ku Klux Klan member.
DeVecchio, 66, has pleaded not guilty in state Supreme Court in Brooklyn to four counts of murder in what prosecutors have billed as one of the worst law enforcement corruption cases in U.S. history.
At his request, the trial is being heard by a judge and not a jury.
Prosecutors say Scarpa showered DeVecchio with cash, stolen jewelry, liquor and even prostitutes in exchange for confidential information, according to an indictment.
Scarpa used the inside tips about the identities and whereabouts of suspected informants and rivals to rub out at least four victims in the late 1980s and early 1990s, authorities said.
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- The Mob never hits a man in a dress.
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- "Agent: Mob Bosses Discussed Giuliani Hit"
That"s an inaccurate headline.
"The FBI agent was merely relaying the unreliable testimony of "the late Gregory Scarpa Sr., a capo-turned-informant... Scarpa has a colorful history..." - Reply to this comment
- "The bosses of New York''s five Mafia families discussed killing Rudy Giuliani in 1986 when he was a mob-busting federal prosecutor, according to testimony Wednesday in the murder trial of a former FBI agent."
I don"t believe it.
The Mob has never "whacked" a Federal prosecutor. They know how that would backfire.
But it does make Giuliani look heroic, doesn"t it.
Nice try, Rudy. - Reply to this comment
- Lulu Dobbs to bring this and more to the situation stall.
Posted by stonebog at 05:29 PM : Oct 25, 2007
Hey stonebog, looks like smokin'' crack ain''t workin'' out so well for you. Maybe you should give it up? - Reply to this comment
- Just for fun, do an image search on "Simon Bar Sinister". He was the evildoer on the Underdog cartoon series.
Look familiar? - Reply to this comment
- The media continually kisses the butt of Gudy Riuliani. The media is pathetic in their biasness and lack of objectivity. The media is filled with intellectual prostitutes. Ron Paul is the only viable candidate for president. The media fears this even though he would protect their free speech to continually lie.
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