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Boston Mafia Targets Wiretap Case

Many reputed New England mobsters will be keeping an eye on a court battle set to resume this week over the legality of wiretaps that helped put several Mafia members in the area behind bars.

At issue is whether the tapes—including a recording of a Mafia induction ceremony in the Boston suburb of Medford that has been used in three mob prosecutions—were obtained legally by the FBI.

If the judge rules the wiretaps were illegal, it could open the door for dozens of Mafia figures to appeal their convictions.

"When the government obtained the Medford tapes, they thought they had the best thing since sliced bread," said attorney Wendy Sibbison, who is handling an appeal for convicted Patriarca crime family soldier Gaetano Milano, one of those at the ceremony.

This week's court action is the latest of several pretrial hearings before U.S. District Judge Mark Wolf regarding the cases of alleged New England crime boss Francis "Cadillac Frank" Salemme and three other accused mobsters.

In a series of stunning revelations last year, defense lawyers learned that several crime figures had worked as FBI informants, some for more than three decades.

The informants included Angelo "Sonny" Mercurio, who was at the induction ceremony.

The FBI also admitted that Stephen "The Rifleman" Flemmi, now facing trial with Salemme, and James J. "Whitey" Bulger, who was named in the same indictment but is on the run, worked for the FBI.

Because federal courts typically allow wiretaps only when no other investigative tools, including informants, are available, defense lawyers say the wiretapping was illegal.

If the tapes are thrown out as evidence, it could affect mob convictions nationwide. The induction ceremony tape has been used at several organized crime trials to prove the existence of the Mafia.

The tape records the Oct. 29, 1989, meeting of 17 men who cut their trigger fingers, burned a holy card with an image of a saint and took a blood oath: "As burns this saint, so will burn my soul. I enter alive into this organization and leave it dead."

Twenty-one reputed mobsters were indicted in March 1990, partly on the evidence of the induction tape.

The following year, prosecutors played the tape in Hartford, Conn., at the racketeering trial of eight members of the Patriarca crime family of New England. All eight Hartford defendants, including Milano, were convicted.

After the Hartford convictions, the induction tape was used to get guilty pleas out of seven members of the Providence, R.I., branch of the Patriarca family, including a plea from Rhode Island's boss Raymond "Junior" Patriarca.

In a 1991 ruling, Judge Wolf acknowledged that the tapes were the foundation of the case against Patriarca: "Absent the evidence intercepted, there may not be a prosecutable case against some of the defendants, including Raymond Patriarca."

Last summer, Wolf als said the revelation that the FBI had informants at the meeting could jeopardize other wiretaps.

By Alison Fitzgerald.
©1998 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed

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