FBI's biggest-ever mob bust shows where Mafia still holds sway
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| New York
Even by New York mafia prosecution standards, the haul of alleged mobsters arrested on Thursday morning by law-enforcement officials was eye-popping.
A gigantic dragnet of 800 police or FBI officials arrested 127 individuals who were either "made members" of La Cosa Nostra or associated with it, according to federal indictments. To avoid clogging the courts, the accused mobsters were processed at an Army base. The FBI calls it one of the biggest single day operations in its history and the largest ever against the Mafia.
Those pulled in included Bartolomeo Vernace, who reportedly sits on organized crime鈥檚 鈥淩uling Panel,鈥 that arbitrates interfamily spats. The haul also included the head of the Colombo Family and 34 members of the Gambino Family. Those arrested included 鈥渃onsiglieres鈥 as well as captains, soldiers and associates.
Altogether, the arrests encompassed six crime families, plus the New England Cosa Nostra which operates in Boston and Providence.
鈥淭oday鈥檚 arrests and charges mark an important step forward in disrupting La Cosa Nostra鈥檚 illegal activities,鈥 said Eric Holder, the US Attorney General, in a press conference in New York.
Mob remains 'resilient and persistent'
The scale of the arrests may come as a surprise to many people. But law-enforcement officials as well as organized crime experts say it shows that organized crime continues to be a blight on society. And even though former law enforcement officials, such as Rudolph Giuliani, former attorney general for the southern district of New York, made inroads in the crime families, the families remain active.
鈥淭he mob has shown itself to be resilient and persistent,鈥 said Janice Fedarcyk, assistant director in charge of the FBI鈥檚 New York division. 鈥淎rresting and convicting the hierarchy of the five families several times over has not eradicated the problem.鈥
The scope of the mob鈥檚 continuing crime activities, as detailed in a two-inch-thick stack of legal documents, included murder, loan-sharking, arson, narcotics trafficking, extortion, robbery, illegal gambling, and labor racketeering.
According to the indictments, the Colombo Family has long had control of the Cement and Concrete Workers Union Local 6A.
鈥淭he La Cosa Nostra is entrenched in certain industries, especially time-sensitive industries where they can control the timing and flow of goods and the labor force has an ability to impose extortionate demands,鈥 says Randy Mastro, a former US Attorney who prosecuted organized crime figures in the 1980s.
The indictments also indicate the Mafia is continuing to operate on the piers. According to the indictments, the Genovese Family extorted members of the International Longshoremen鈥檚 Association (ILA) to force the men to give a portion of their annual Christmas royalty payments to the mob as a sort of tax.
' "On the Waterfront" stuff'
Paul Fishman, the US attorney for the district of New Jersey, said the indictments showed that organized crime鈥檚 corrupt influence in the ports was 鈥減ervasive.鈥
鈥淭he idea that people have to pay to work at the ports, and their union leaders are not representing them is not justifiable at all,鈥 said Mr. Fishman.
鈥淭his is 鈥極n the Waterfront鈥 stuff,鈥 says Mr. Mastro, referring to the classic 1954 movie with Marlon Brando as an ex-prize fighter who tries to stand up to his corrupt union bosses. 鈥淯nfortunately, there is still criminal influence on the piers 60 years later.鈥
Mastro, now with the law firm Gibson Dunn & Crutcher in New York, says the reason organized crime continues to operate is because they continue to recruit new members in what is almost a military type of organization. 鈥淚t is not just about one figure or one head of a family, it is an organized structure with dons and capos and a quasi-military structure,鈥 he says.
If the cases go to trial, jurors will probably be listening to hours of wire tapped conversations and testimony from informants.
鈥淲e used every tool in our toolbox,鈥 said Ms. Fedarcyk of the FBI.
The charges brought against the individuals carry a variety of maximum penalties up to as much as life in prison.